London Monopoly – Free Parking

and we should be live so we should be live now I’m just going to give it a minute until I actually see the number on the chat where is the chat oh interesting they’ve changed something usually I had access to whatever was said before now I can only see the new messages okay welcome Roberta nice to see you here welcome everyone that just joined so we’ve got about 10 minutes to go we’re just waiting for everyone to connect hi ktie nice to see you here and welcome Mike so if anyone was watching this on replay in the last few day if you wanted to skip the HS if you wanted to go straight to the point you can skip the next 10 minutes we just uh getting to know each other free parking yes that’s why I actually wanted to start with that sign there’s no free parking around here I’m afraid but I’ll take you to a car park anyway hi Mary hi rone nice to see you here I’m probably going to make a move cuz I’m by the stage though of of the um of the Apollo theat here so it looks like I’m waiting for the actors to come out I am not I was just standing here because it’s a quiet quiet street hi Islam well Lori I can re assure you not the full tourist going to be about the car park that was actually quite a tough one to decide because originally I was going to take you back to pekam um where I um where I took you last time actually where I Ed up on the free car park to um peam lels which is an actual former car park but the thing is last time I’ve done it the signal was so so and also it’s now been refurbished with bars and everything and and um oh so this is the star I don’t know who they are but it seems like they’re taking selfies with people I’m not I was not there for that um yeah so what what was I saying yeah the um the uh yeah peam lels the thing is it’s really nice to visit but they often play a lot of music so um you know with YouTube music in the background it’s uh it’s a bit of an issue so um so I decided not to take you there so we are in SoHo I don’t know who he is what’s playing is that leis I think it’s Le isn’t it I don’t know I didn’t even check what’s on the Apollo but it’s probably quite popular because everyone is waiting for an autograph and a selfie welcome an so we’ve got about let me check 8 minutes to go I suppose I should have checked really I’ve been waiting in waiting here for 10 minutes so I should have just checked what’s on at the Apollo at the moment I mean we could ask him for a selfie but I don’t know who he is so we probably should skip it looks like there’s a bit of a queue [Music] anyway so Tish you might have already guessed it is indeed the car park you wanted that we’ll go and see hi Michelle hi Natasha nice to see you here and welcome ca he doesn’t play cette that’s for sure no I don’t think it’s I don’t know what’s playing here it’s yeah no I don’t [Music] know yeah it’s probably a oneman show cuz there’s only one act so and welcome mat you so we’ve got 7 Minutes 7 minutes to go [Music] Henry leis joh well let’s see I don’t [Music] know hi Margaret welcome I’ll get on there and go to and Bon natal so we’ve got about 5 [Music] minutes you know what let’s go and wait on the other side I was going to start down there anyway oh no it is a play we have a second actor here okay no I think people are queing to speak to them so I don’t want to I don’t want to interrupt you know that’ll be a bit awkward anyway cuz I don’t know who they are right let’s wait over [Music] here Jonathan s there we go CA thank you now we know see I could have waited and have my selfie um that’s not that’s not why I was here you’d like to sign autographs well you know what Tish I have done that once when um after being on the UND datatables I had a couple of people asking me for autographs on the streets and one of them actually changed his mind cuz I was like oh I’m going to I’m going to look for a pen he’s like hold on now I just want a selfie instead so I was like oh no I just wanted to do a second autograph so technically I’ve signed a new one what plays it l that’s what I should have found out before to go live it is whatever is on at the at the Apollo at the moment let me see 4 minutes to go hi MIT welcome [Music] [Music] were you the unstable un unable I don’t [Music] know oh Lori no I was I’m guessing you mean the undatable no I was actually dating a girl with Tourette um that was a bit of a random um thing actually I was here in a club in SoHo when I was a bit too Tipsy to remember that I spoke to people from television I had a bit of a surprise um the next morning morning when I had a call from a production for Channel 4 so yeah that was years ago that was uh I think I was 27 at the time but yeah mind mind Wangler okay good to know I’ve not I’ve not read much about the play unstable well I think we all are aren’t we yes ly it was um it was on channel 4 for many many years I think they’ve they’ve only stopped a few day a few years ago doing the replay cuz they used to broadcast it again every January for many years I had no idea how many years people would recognize me on the streets for now it’s over and I’ve got to bit older anyway I’m put on weight so it doesn’t happen anymore yeah two years years ago exactly well actually it’s been 10 it’s 10 years ago now cuz I’ve just turned 37 so yeah right let me see what time it is 2 minutes 2 minutes to go guys exactly the thing we’ve done well you know I kind of think that the more you say yes in life the more happens to you if you say no then nothing happens so yeah I’ve had some interesting experiences I don’t think you’d find it on on Channel 4 anymore but you can probably find it on YouTube channel 4 um season 4 episode 4 it [Music] is oh thank you Lori yeah we quite close quite close in age all right let me flip this letter on in case in case you’re bored of my face so you might see a few um gay flags cuz we are in Soo you’re 30 years old in your [Music] mind I don’t even know what age I am in my mind sometimes I feel like 12 sometimes I feel like 70 so depends on the [Music] day right 1 minute to go never bought of so oh that I thought you said that beautiful place that beautiful face thank you and I think it’s time to go no 1 minute still you’re 102 in your mind wow right let’s see is it 9:30 yes it is so welcome guys it is 9:30 p.m. UK time we are live live from Soho um if anyone was new to me I’m Natalie you’re very welcome and for the ones that don’t know what we’re doing cuz it’s a bit of a random title for uh pre parking we’re doing those live Monopoly tours so I’ve been throwing the dice on the board at home Live on YouTube and we ended up on free car park so I had to find a car park in London not free I’m afraid um but yeah I’ll take you to a car park and we’ll look at at the local property market and a few local murders as well so let’s uh let’s get started starting without further ado so we are now in the heart of Soho we are on rer street and uh you can tell straight away that you are in SoHo when you see those type of uh neon light let me zoom in a bit so this is the Raymond review bar or was the bar doesn’t exist anymore let me zoom in so the uh the naon itself it’s actually listed for its historical Heritage so we have to keep it you might see it’s a lifting up her legs because it was indeed a strip club but the very first strip strip club in the area Paul Raymond was a bit of um a a a baron of of uh of strip clubs really that started in the 50s but of course in the 50s um strip clubs were actually illegal but he got away with it because he actually did not register it as an entertainment place he registered it as a private club so he registered it as private club so he could do whatever he wanted it was Private the memberships of course were quite um affordable and he ended up getting a lot of um strip clubs and this type of businesses in the area so he became um quite Rich let’s say it’s uh it’s no longer here you do not have the Raymond review anymore but you still have quite a few kinky places here oops Al done I’ve done something wrong there we still have a few kinky places here still and we’ll probably talk about a few of them tonight this is a yard a very famous uh G venue and let’s dive straight in with a couple of properties so I have a couple of flats in the building here so on top of the yard probably a noisy Place uh uh in the evening but amazing location to to live in especially if you happen to be a party animal so the first one let me get you the photograph it is um a one-bedroom flat for sale so you’re looking to buy this lovely one-bedroom flat right up here how much do you think that might cost tonight the it’s going to be fairly easy for you to guess tonight because the prices are quite consistent from one place to the next so how much would you spend um or do you think one might spend for a one bedroom flat in this lovely building here in the heart of Soho so we’re looking to buy a one bedroom how much do you think that can be 250,000 says Natasha 9990k says Lori 2 million says Margaret 1.5 million says tar 400 says Ry well it is a lease hold so you never know sometimes the lease is not very long Michelle says 500,000 Pisa says 700 some 3 thou 375,000 TR says 490 midy you’re quite close right let me show you the the answer I think it’s uh 680 but let’s double check there we go so £ 680,000 it’s not too bad compared to what we’ve seen in in other locations I mean you know so is known for sex drugs on rock and roll and it is still today an area with a lot of sex work so it doesn’t get too high oh yeah anyway let me show you the other one so the other one I think it’s going to be a rental let me double check so I don’t say anything wrong yes so we’ve got a studio let me show you the image so we’re looking for a monthly rent for this lovely studio in the very same building so how much would you spend for a monthly rent here so we’re looking for a monthly rent no not too expensive T you’re right well the rents are quite high but the to buy I was actually uh uh pleasantly surprised by the prices let’s say not that I can afford it but yeah so monthly rent for a studio flat in the very same building how much do you think that would 2,000 Margaret says 2,000 says poine you guys are getting quite good at the rental um 2K says tar 2K says Michelle jovv you’re the closest one so far M you’re now the closest one t it’s a little bit less okay Mitsy I think you the you’re the closest let me show you the answer so 2590 for the studio so that is a lot for a studio but it it is quite big to be honest for a studio so you’re still cooking right next to your bed but you’ve got a bit more space right now let me show you a last one before we uh before we go much further so we’ve got one more in the building here and it is a one-bedroom flat for rent let me show you so a lovely one bedroom for right up here how much do you think that might be so it’s going to be more than the studio of course so one bedroom 2.5 says ktie how much do you think monthly rent for a one bedroom right up here 2,900 says Margaret it’s a bit more Lori says 2,900 as well pisas it’s a bit more Michelle you’re the closest so far but it’s more tar it’s a bit more MIT you’re the closest so far but it’s even more Natasha you’re quite close as well Elizabeth you’re not too far either but it’s a bit more let me show you 5,000 so 5K a months for a one bedroom here it seems quite nice and bright but still that is a lot of money anyway let’s go so we have a lovely Pub here it is the White Horse it is a Sam Smith’s Pub if you are from the UK you might know the the pubs here although they are often they have different names they often attach to a brewery it’s called The Tide house system so if you go to a Sam Smith Pub the the vast majority of the beers and cells inside are going to be from the Sam Smith Brewery that’s in in Yorkshire it’s a very old Brewery and uh when you see a pub that says free house like the weather spoons they actually are not tied in with a brewery they can sell whatever beer they want anyway the White Horse it’s quite an Old Pub and there was a a quite sad murder inside it is um it is a young man 21 years old his name was Larry Winters he uh we are in the 60s a lot of the murders we mention tonight are actually from the 60s he um he actually escaped from the Army he was in the parachute regiment he had suffered from a bad health and and bad headaches all his life and he was kind of um trying to treat himself with uh with uh uh uh alcohol really and um so he left he left the Army he actually stole a gun that he was going to give give as a gift to his little brother and his plan was to go back to family in uh in Scotland he got to Houston Station and he realized he didn’t have enough money so he decided to use the gun for a little ordinary robbery and uh uh he was not going to use it he was just going to you know scare people get the te open get some money jump on the train to um jump on the train to um to uh uh uh Scotland and no one would never know no one would die of course no and uh well what happened is that he he came here with um with a gun uh he pointed it towards the the the BART Thunder pad uh a 44 years old and he he was like open the till sadly Paddy said no and uh and and and Larry probably did not even envis envisage this situation and he actually shot he then run away on the streets like um with no money whatsoever and he was caught in uh in Houston Station he had some some mental health issues and and um sadly he was actually locked up but he was not really treed with the right medicines he was um he actually started riots in um I in prison where some police officers were were stabbed um so quite a sad story and Paddy Paddy lost his life anyway one more dark uh dark murder just across the street here today it is jopo so it’s an Italian ice cream but back in the in the’ 60s no this one we actually in the 2000 2004 but um in uh uh in well even more in the 60s but still today you have um a few uh uh uh in Soo a few of what we call the Clip Joint you know there are those um clubs that kind of lure young men in um promising or or pretending that they might get some sex and then you get nothing um that’s that’s what used to be the case here uh in 2004 it was um a little Club called the Blue Bunny and uh they had an oess outside and you know a very pretty girl that would be approaching young men and be like hey you’re looking for girls oh it’s only five pounds to get in um but they would they would never actually set the term sex or strip teas or they would kind of make you believe that you’ll get some but then you’d get downstairs and you’d get nothing they didn’t even have a license for alcohol so they’ll charge you 20 quid for an orange juice and then when you try to leave they’ll charge you even a more ridiculous amount of money and of course you might be like Oh I’m calling the police but they’ve not done anything wrong and you have no proof anyway and you’ve got those big bonsers that scare you off and they’ll even take you to the cash point if needs be um there were a lot of those businesses uh uh in SoHo probably far less today but there used to be a lot of them and um the the hostess at the door that night was Camille Gordon she was a pretty young girl from Jamaica originally with a great smile and um she uh she approached a gentleman like usual you know it was our job she was a student she was trying to become a nursery teacher and you know it was just better money because as as a student you always struggle to find time to study and work at the same time to to to survive so she was attracted by a slightly better money than you know working in a cafe or whatever it might be and um and uh that night one customer was not happy to be conned he came back with um with a knife stabbed her run away to this day we still don’t know who so that’s quite a sad one so that that one is 2004 so it’s not not that long ago really and uh we’ll uh sadly tonight we’ll talk about a few uh uh people in the in the sex tra that have been attacked but you know Soo is known for sex workers and sadly it is one of the jobs that is the most dangerous the most exposed um because of the nature of of the job because you know you meant to be in privacy with a stranger but also because of the law because of course still today you’re not I mean you are allowed to sell your body but BRS are illegal so legally we pushing those those young girls to work Al lone so they are even more vulnerable but anyway let me turn around we are now on now on great windmill Street windmill because there used to be a windmill over here but it is also known for a a a club that uh that is known as the the windmill it was a um well I’m tempted to say a striptis club it was not actually a Stripes at the beginning of the century uh strips were illegal you couldn’t have naked ladies dancing but that was not fair because you’d go to the National Gallery and you’ll see a lot of paintings of naked venuses you know is that rude no so the Lord had agreed that uh well if they were not moving that wasn’t rude so that’s um that’s when they started to do what they called Tableau Vivant so they are basically uh uh you know those kind of shows where they they’ll open the curtain you’d have naked l is taking a pose and then um uh they wouldn’t move then they’ll close the curtain light off then they take a different different pose so that’s how they um how they got away with it the lady that opened this one you might have heard of her she’s um she’s Laura uh she’s Laura Anderson you might have seen the movie It’s called um uh so I’m just trying not to put the camera on people’s face it’s called Mrs Anderson uh presence so that’s exactly Tish you saw that coming I’ve not actually seen it it’s with Judy Dash um I’d like to see it so it’s about the creation of the um of the club anyway across the street here we had another murder this is today uh one of those Speak Easy not that uh secret but uh back in 1945 in the basement here you had um max dance hall so that was a dance hole as the name say and uh you had a gentleman dancing inside one night called Mr Json now Mr Johnson was particularly unlucky he had he had had a series of terrible accident to his life he had broken his neck two or three times he had to wear some kind of a a metal neck collar um he had lost I think two fingers he had had a motorcycle accident he had been kicked by a horse and he fell off a lather so he had uh a lot of major injuries really he was particularly unlucky and he managed to um to find himself a a girlfriend known as Lena also known as Rita Lori is saying supposedly she did because it’s suppos oh yeah so they did not close down through the second world war they were quite proud of that so yes so um so so young men wouldn’t die without seeing a naked woman um so yeah to to uh to to to get back to Mr Johnson he found himself a girlfriend Lena what he didn’t know is that um Lena was also selling her body when she wasn’t with him and Lena met an American Soldier jine so he was on leave had seven days in London before to go back to America and the uh uh they spend a few night together he seemed to be very much uh uh attracted to to Lena known as Rita when she was on that job and um one night she didn’t turn up so he was looking for her all over all over Soo when he run into a friend of his and um they uh they they spend the day together and they kept uh looking for Lena everywhere and um eventually he got into Mark’s dance hall and he saw Lena um she was dancing she was dancing with that guy um and he he obviously was Furious and he decided to um well he they had a bit of a physical altercation that was it you know just a a a a mini fight and uh and then he left it but his um his friend the other Soldier um private Thomas craft he got a knife out of his shoes and he stabbed the guy so he stabbed Mr Johnson he did not even know why he just saw him having a friend with his fight and he stabbed him so the very lucky uh unlucky sorry Mr Johnson died for literally no reason anyway there we are so this is our car park now it is not free and actually I’m going to get you to guess if you were let’s say you came to soo for a date an early one cuz I think they have a little offer in the evening but let’s say you you came to soo for a date at 5:00 p.m. you’d spend 3 hours parked here how much do you expect to pay how much do you think it would cost you 3 hours of car park here in the middle of Soho I’ll be interested to see what you guess because I don’t drive so I don’t really know how much you meant to pay car park but um so how much would you uh consider paying for 3 hours of uh of uh car park in um so 3 hours parking in Soo how much do you think you might pay it is quite a historical car park by the way 45 20 22 Tish says 50 30 says Teresa 100 says Diane 30 30 300 says Natalie Sarah you got it 60 quid 60 that’s more expensive than the date and apparently it is particularly unsafe the Google reviews are horrible apparently a lot of the cars are getting broken into SE 75 oh you guys are actually not that far I um and you know what the prices are not new um the um you know the inflation was quite bad in the last few years but according to the reviews even even three years ago it was 60 as well so that’s quite expensive and it is apparently again I’ve not been inside but according to the reviews they have a toilet but there’s a sign next to the toilet that reads um use at your own risk so I don’t know what could happen to you in the toilet but yeah and they have a lot of reviews of people that are really unhappy because their cars have been broken into or because they’ve pre-booked and then they got there and there was no there was no space so yeah to be fair you are in the Hur of Soho to drive here anyway you’d have to pay congestion charge so that’s already 15 plus depending on on your vehicle you l so you’d have to pay quite a lot to drive around here anyway and if it’s a later date uh you have a special offer in the evening apparently so that’s not too bad the evening rate and it’s actually so it’s actually an interesting car park because it is listed so it is protected for its historical um uh Heritage it uh it dates back to 1929 it opened as um a Le garage today it’s part of the uh what is it uh National car park NCP so it’s um it’s it’s one of them today but yeah yeah well I think if I think people uh people driving in Central in central London usually they have uh they they have money anyway anyway so let’s uh let’s go back into Soho so by the way Soho um it’s uh it’s not like uh Soho in the in um in New York it’s you know in New York I think it’s South Houston Soo it’s actually a hunting cry so you’d see a rabbit or or hair or whatever you your target was and you’d go Soo um because it used to be a hunting ground and it is an area of London that historically is quite interesting because um well of the immigration that really shaped this area um after the the revocation of the edit of not in um uh 1685 I think it was a lot of the French Protestant they they felt unsafe in France and a lot of them moved to to London some of them moved to spit field as we mentioned in my Jack theer tour and some of them moved here into Soo when I say some of them a lot of them so much so that at the beginning of the 18th century half of the population of the Parish of of Soho was French and because of the success of the uh the the the French immigration it later on became a safe heaven for different uh uh Community a lot of Greek we have a street called Greek Street here um that were um being persecuted as well by the Turks um and a lot of Italians so today it’s uh you can still feel the different uh the different waves of immigration that uh shaped the this area and this is a sex shop so this is the so adult store um I’m not going to tell you much about the the sex stories but on the first floor here there was a murder as well here it’s a uh it used to be a sex worker that lived in in there her name was Rosa and um she um let me show you the name of the street this is Walker Court but a lot of people people call it Wonker court because of uh well the the establishments you find here so Rosa was um uh uh was uh set up upstairs and um she had a a custumer that was um that was called Uh Uh George Thomas Pickering and um he happened to be deaf he had he was from Yorkshire and he um as a young toddler he got menages and um he actually it damaged his his vocal cords so he became Def and sorry de on on on mute and uh he suffered from massive headaches for the rest of his life he did get married to um to a a lady barl she was also she was also de um and the uh um he used to come and see Rosa O’Neil the the the the prostitute up there um she liked him or at least she didn’t mock him you know and he was a regular um and one day uh it’s it’s very sad but apparently he uh he had enough of his of his headaches and uh he decided uh that he was going to take his own life so that day he did not go to work um you can see the type of uh establishment here so he didn’t go to work he actually came here to Soho he got drunk and he started roaming around then he went went on on Brewer Street that’s where we were earlier with the the car park um and he uh uh he bought a knife that officially was meant to be for his own wrist um and he doesn’t know why nobody knows why he actually went on on visited Rosa um she didn’t she wasn’t scared of him at all he was a regular he used to be lovely with her and out of nowhere he stabbed her with a long 6 in knife and run away he then uh uh he actually gave himself to the police uh uh uh uh in Wimbledon uh the next day but we still don’t know why he doesn’t know either he probably had a terrible mental health as well but really it shows how dangerous this this job is you know it’s um how how how much at risk those uh those ladies find themselves and sadly I have another case here uh quite similar scenario sadly and right here above the the Supreme see that little shop it’s a fancy I’ve never been inside it’s it’s not I’m think I think I’m too old but it’s a fancy clothes shop um and uh above that on the first first level it used to be a sex worker that lived here as well her name was Ruby well she was a French lady her name was actually Roland but Roland is not very sexy so she called herself Ruby and um she had uh she had a regular as well at the time a lot of the sex workers they would have had a maid um so the maid would open the door and and and deal with all that and um uh uh so she had a regular David James Emory he was a young man he was a criminal he had been for he had been since he was 12 really at the age of 12 he already got Coates for burglary he used the LA to go out to his neighbor’s flat just above his room and bugler them so he was a criminal but um he he was always very nice to Ruby he was actually probably in love with her and um uh uh one day he uh he came to see Ruby the maid knew him so the maid probably wouldn’t have let him up if he was a a scary gentleman or a stranger but she knew him they had been you know he had been a customers for five years and uh he um so he he he got up he opened that bedroom um bright pink uh bedroom and the lady on the bed that was not Ruby that was another French lady called Jacqueline Jacqueline Bei and uh he got into the room and he was like oh you’re not Ruby but you know she was quite pretty as well and he was like well I’ll you know I’ll do with her he got out of his wallet two one note one pound was much more than to at the time and the French lady took it and she also took the second one and it’s like she’s like is that for me too but she playfully took it apparently or according to what he said again we only have the version of the of the the killer here cu the the victims don’t really have a voice and uh he uh um so she took it and he said no no no that one is for my fair home I keep this one and apparently she kind of still playfully refused to uh to give it to her uh to him and uh that’s when uh uh she fell and she grabbed what he described as probably a poker and she tried to hit him he took it from her and uh and he smashed it on on her head and um and run away uh the the police was called and they actually came quite quickly but she passed away now that version of the story is actually quite um concordant it’s it’s it’s I mean if you look at the injuries on our body it looks like it is possible but he says he run away with the poker and or what he described as probably a poker and he uh and then he throw it on the um on the pavement in a doorway or something that poker was never found and um he uh uh you know the the maid knew that there was nothing in that bed bedro that looked like a poker or nothing that could be used as a weapon so he was um he was uh uh he was actually taken down for manslaughter and not murder but it’s actually still questionable because if the poker wasn’t there he would have taken it with him why would he bring a poker unless he had the intention of of hurt hurting someone and if he did woo did he want to kill Ruby will uh we’ll never know anyway this is the comptons so another great gay Pub we’ve just we’ve just gone by The Village another gay club and this is poppies fish and ships now we spoke about poppies um when did we spoke about puppies oh in Notting Hill last time so the um the officially the best fish and ships in London according to reviews and according to many tour guides um that’s where Hightech myself when I do when I do food tours around here um it was opened by a um a guy called uh pops when he was Pat but they called him pops and uh he had started at the age of 11 in uh working in a in fish ships he was uh cutting the newspapers cuz you might know back in the day we used to um we used to use newspaper to uh to do little little little cones for the for the fish and chips anyway let me show you the French house which is ironically I realized when researching this tour it’s probably the only Pub in SoHo that I’ve never been to but this uh this establishment here the French house it’s got an interesting history it is actually it used to be known as the um the yorkminster and uh uh it used to be managed by a Belgium guy so it was not it was not even French but through the second world war it is here that the French um uh uh uh resistan the people for free free France met including General deul so the general the was often upstairs doing meeting through the the war effort and later on as a French president he actually did come on visit uh a few times so that’s um an interesting again I’ve never been inside and next door this little um this little thae place today well it used to be one of those Clip Joints um we’ve mentioned them before so those clubs that would charge you extortion to to go in and see some strippers or see some girls and then you’ll get nothing um and it was known as the bus stop it was uh managed um well it it belonged to a a local gangster known as Tony Miller Tony Miller was um he was Italian originally but he grew up in croen oh by the way croen I’m taking you there on uh on um Thursday so save the date we’re going to Cen and uh Tony Millow was he was he was a horrible man he was horrible with everyone and the U he had worked for the Richardson gang in South London he had a lot of people that hated him a lot of people that attacked him even a d he had been um he had had his bum cut by a little man a d wrestler apparently Tony didn’t sit for a week after that so he decided that he had to have a bodyguard so he hired one of um his former friends from boxing to um to be his bodyguard and uh they worked together for 12 years the guy was known as Big Al and Big Al was actually managing the little uh the little Club here Big Al had a big hurt and you know if Tony didn’t pay on time he might have actually paid his stuff and wait for the money and it turned up that Tony own him the equivalent of 5,000 today and one day Big Al Big Al realized he was taken as a fool he took uh he took Tony to the side in the middle of the club so you had the strippers you had everyone there and he actually shot him three times then he went to the office and and and shot himself so Tony mow run into the streets here and he actually died on the um on the on the Pavements Tony mow was not missed I mean people hated him even the police officers were said to be like it is said that when police officer said oh Tony Melo is dead let’s have a party um anyway so yeah one local gangsters there were a lot of those gangsters in the 60s because well let’s face it some of the the the the the the the the the BRS here and stuff they would often give a little bribed to to the police officers and um there was a a bit more of that back in the day anyway let me show you this amazing Pub so this is the Admiral Duncan it is as you can probably tell a gay Pub and I’ve been there myself a few times it’s a small venue but very nice they do some um drag shows and karaoke and uh and um the Admiral Duncan is one of the oldest gay pubs around here the you know the police that was a bit maybe um easy on the sex work and and maybe uh uh uh taking taking everything uh um lightly that was also quite uh quite useful for the gay community of course because let’s not forget that gay sex was illegal until 1967 and um uh so that’s why that’s how Soho became also a safe heaven for for the gay community and um sadly the Admiral Duncan was targeted by by a neoi so I’m just going to wait cuz it’s a bit noisy Natalie K Natalie what you won’t find me my friend you sure K you social media is that small you know and I can see you tomorrow so the um the uh um the Admiral Duncan yeah was targeted by a Neo-Nazi in 99 um very very sad story the uh so that crazy young neonazi guy had already targeted Brixton Brixton is close to where I live it’s actually a very black area he had Dropped a Bomb and um and um Electric Avenue luckily that day there was um there was a a local gentleman that spotted the bag and he moved it so he grabbed the bag and he moved it towards the Iceland shop that was a little bit less um busy he called the police and that’s when the bomb exploded so it injured a few people because of course uh it was very violent and he had the the attacker had placed some Nails in the bomb so very very uh horrible bomb but luckily not that many people were around um a few weeks later he actually targeted breake Lane that is the bengoli area that’s where we go through my Jack the rer tour he had dropped a bag on hbur Street um that’s where um Annie Chapman famously uh uh lost her life um and again by luck a taxi driver spotted the bag and he actually grabbed it to take it to to a bricklane police station so when the bomb exploded in front of the station luckily not too many people were around and the police had a a CCTV image of the the attacker that they published in the Press actually one guy working in bman he was like oh this looks like Dave but it took a few hours to tell the terrorism um Squad and uh the attacker knew that he might be caught so he actually had to rush his last uh attack so he prepared a bomb in a big rock sack again or sport bag um homemade but full of nails so you know once it explosed those Nails would go into everyone he came to visit the Admiral Duncan and um he bought himself a a paint uh sat at the pub and uh uh he left his bag on the floor and he actually told someone to look after his pain he said he was going to go and get some cash the near cash p is a couple of minutes away and the guy didn’t come back and the moment when the staff and the gentleman noticed the bag that is when it exploded sadly it’s a very small place that gets very busy and uh it it was it was busy uh uh three people lost their life four people lost some Limbs and um and uh uh 73 were injured so horrible horrible terrorism attack and um the the pub manager that’s that’s actually double s the um the pub manager was a young man called David moley he um he I think he was from Yorkshire he had been at aded his um his parents were not aware that he was gay and um uh he survived he survived the attack he actually helped everyone and um uh of course all over the newspapers where Admiral Duncan GB bombed so he had to tell his parents so I’m I’m sorry you find out this way and um 5 years later David had kind of Chang his life he was a very popular character in SoHo he was also a drag artist and uh uh he he had decided to to change his carer to another Pub cuz he was drinking a bit too much and uh so 5 years later he was actually with a friend sat on a bench after a night in heaven which is another another G night club on here when he was targeted by a group of homophobic teenagers a horrible little girl called Chelsea came with a camera in their face and she was like hey it’s for a documentary but happy slapping and then he was basically kicked to to death so he had survived such a homophobic attack to then uh to then sadly be killed um by another homophobic attack so uh yeah very sad very sad story now across the street here this is where um Carl Marx used to live he lived in poverty Carl marks when he was in SoHo so poor apparently that um one of his children died and he couldn’t even pay for a coffin and across the street it is the opposite of poverty here is um quite a private club it’s the sohoo house at number 76 Dean Street um the Soho House you might have heard of it because it is here that Megan and Harry had their first date so it’s one of their those mumbers clubs you know they have um I think they are across the globe actually the so house and youve got uh whatever Capital you’re in you can you can go there but the memberships are probably about 300 pound a month or something where is yes Sarah yeah his parents were absolutely fine with is coming out yeah yeah yeah yeah anyway let’s go back to some interesting properties so I’ve got one right here in this little um in this little Street here so let me check so I don’t say anything wrong so it’s a one bedroom to buy I’ll show you the building and I’ll show you the photos so we’re looking for a one bedroom to buy it is in this one here I’ll show you the photos let me make sure I’m showing you the right one yes there we go so how much would you buy a one bedroom here so we’re looking for a one bedroom to buy how much would you pay for a one bedroom here it is a little bit more expensive than the one we’ve seen earlier because it’s a much quieter Street I suppose it’s probably quite noisy on rer Street so one bedroom to buy oh Judy I think you’re quite close let me check T lar it’s a little bit less oh Michelle it’s to to buai to buai about a million yeah it’s not far from from a million M you’re quite close as well Dian it’s a little bit more oh did you mean 5.9 million no then it’s less um 500,000 says Elizabeth it’s a bit more all right let me show you the answer 900,000 again it’s always it’s a Leo again so you never know sometimes you don’t have that many years or you have many years but yeah 900 ,000 so it’s quite consistent with what we’ve seen earlier cuz it’s much quieter so uh although it might be the same size right now we have I think it’s a studio in that building here let me double check that I don’t say anything wrong yes one Studio to buy let me show you the photo there we go so how much would you pay for a studio to buy right here so we’re looking for a little Studio to buy so again quite small but at least the the bed area is quite separate from the kitchen although it’s in the same room so how much would you pay for a studio right here I’ll start moving as you guess 9t 50 says STK 2 million says Natalie it’s a bit less than 2 Millions oh Margaret you’re quite close MSY you’re not too far either ronie you’re very close as well Trish I think you’re the closest one so far Elizabeth it’s a bit less bnny you’re not too far either go there eat and everything no I’m not afraid of walking down those little Street no not at all it’s actually busy tonight I knew it was going to be but cuz usually I try to do to do tours a bit later when it’s not busy but so he’s always busy anyway um Mike says 800,000 all right let me show you the answer 550 so not too bad not too bad right let me get rid of these images that we go and here we’ve got some of those break up windows again I’m sure most of you know what they are I never know if if if people are watching me from the for the first time so if you don’t know what those are it is because of the window tax we had in the 18th century it was in the 18th century it was quite difficult to know how much money people were making so the the government find found a way cuz the windows were quite expensive so government decided to uh to put a tax on Windows if you had more than so many windows on your facade you’d pay so much taxes and uh the thing is nowadays those buildings are often listed for their historical Heritage so even if you wanted to reopen those windows that had been breaked up two centuries ago you wouldn’t be allowed to oh they probably don’t have much of a view at all Mary anyway we have an a flat I think it’s a one bedroom to rent but let me double check so I don’t say anything wrong yes so we’re looking for a one bedroom flat to rent so we’re looking for a monthly price let me show you the pictures there we go so it’s right up there the the last window at the top and it is a one bedroom to buy for London it is cheap yes it’s uh it’s not too so actually you know what I should try to find a flat in cidon for for when I take you there in a in a few days you’ll see it’s a bit cheaper [Music] there 1,500 says Natalie 1,9 900 saric oh it’s a bit more guys so it’s a one better oh Lor this one is to rent we’re looking for a price to rent sry maybe I didn’t Express that properly 1,300 says Ry 2K 2K Lara um Lori and Sara let’s start working towards the next one as we go it’s to rent we’re looking for a price to rent guys not for a price to buy we’re looking for a price to rent so a mon a monthly rent three Cas says uh Rosemary Trish you are the closest midy you guys are really good at this Rosemary midat Rao very close let me show you the answer 1,490 so that’s uh that’s uh that’s a bit of money I mean well I suppose if you are in a couple it’s but it’s still uh you know even if you are in a couple it’s still 1,600 each or something anyway let me show you one more that’s going to be very easy because it’s also a one bedroom and as I told you the the prices are quite um uh uh uh quite consistent around here so let me oh God I spent edges looking at the windows the other day and now I forgot yeah it’s this one here so up here we looking for a one bedroom to um to rent let me show you the photos that should be the easiest one of the night how much would you pay for one one bedroom up here it should be very easy because of course it’s not not that diff different from the last one we got so one bedroom a monthly rent we’re looking [Music] for how much would you pay for a monthly rent up here Michelle you’re the closest one so far Elizabeth you’re very close as well too noisy well you’re quite right it’s actually it’s probably very noisy and it’s noisy every night of the week it’s not like only weekend it’s just um you know I’ve I mean I’ve spent quite a few nights myself partying in SoHo and it doesn’t have to be on a weekend Rosemary Natasha you are the closest one so far right let me show you the answer 3,000 467 so not very not very far from the one we’ve just seen so that’s uh that was uh that was an easy one mik quite close as well okay let’s get going cuz I still have a lot to tell you so we are now on frit Street and um oh I nearly F fell down um you might see a bit of a blue plaque up there you probably won’t be able to read from here but this is for johon snow so the regulars to my two you might have heard of about snow we mentioned him before in my tour about the the plague and chera he was an epidemiologist one of the first ones really and a good epidemiologist they don’t only study the cases but they study the the audities the um the exceptions oh yes Natalie London is very expensive very very expensive I’ve had a few friends that have moved away to different European countries in the last few months because it’s getting it’s getting ridic really um so yes so johon snow he uh he did this uh amazing study on on Kera there was an epidemy of of Kera in the 1850s here in SoHo and um he actually found out he actually proved that Kera was waterbone that it um transmitted by the Water by a particular pump here in Soo and he managed to actually close it down and stop the epidemic yet the sanity board didn’t believe him people at the time were convinced that the smells were the vectors of the disease anyway this is Ron Scott a famous uh jazz club and you might have seen it in the if any of you watched the um Emy Wine House movie that just came out there’s actually a scene in in Ron Scots and here we’ve got the iconic barit Talia barit Talia is very uh very famous because he it until 4:00 a.m. so at the moment it’s 12: so midday till 4:00 a.m. so a lot of the artist that went to uh to play at at Honis Scot so or a lot of people in the night out they often have a a little snack a late night snack at Bar Italia and right above the the the the bar you might see a little plaque this is for John B this is the gentleman that created the television a Scottish engineer he moved here because he had been kicked out of his uh of his former accommodation because um because he had created an explosion so he moved here and it’s actually from up here that he did the first um uh uh television broadcast in 1925 apparently though the uh the broadcast was um interrupted by some angry sex workers because they could see all the antennas and everything and they were convinced it was a new system to spy on them so they they were knocking at the door not very happy and straight ahead in the middle of the screen now you might see a little door that is the entrance to Shear with the security behind the door it is now the only lesbian bar in London there are a lot of lesbian events or lesbian nights but in terms of fulltime lesbian bar it’s the only one so she bar it is anyway uh let’s go uh let’s go towards the the the back streets to R streets apparently rily is a French name I don’t see it but apparently there are a lot of n names here that are um coming from French people because of the the honos Apparently ROM is one of them um the uh the the the the um the French influence here you can uh you can also see it in Dickens with um uh you know inel of Two Cities you’ve got this character Dr manette he he lives here in Soo he actually has a street name after named after him now anyway I’ve got another murder location for you right here it is a it is a restaurant nowadays it is a restaurant called goti it’s a French restaurant but it used to be in the 60s a restaurant called the Taj Mahal it was um Asian food um some of the stuff inside were from uh East Pak East Pakistan Bangladesh today and um one day they had a a a a robber that came inside his name was bash he came inside and tried to uh to take the till the the manager Ali somehow believed it was his responsibility to protect the till he jumped on Basher uh uh and uh and he he called some of his colleagues and um neighbors there used to be some uh some other um people from his country living upstairs they run on to help him they maintained the the the the guy on the on the on on the floor they called the police of course um so when the police arrived it seemed like a clear cut of of just uh um managing a robbery uh sadly Basher died in hospital two hours later and when they started to look into his injuries it did look like the like the stuff did not use um appropriate uh uh the appropriate amount of of of force really um he had been brutally attacked kicked 20 21 of his ribs were actually smashed and they were going into his Lums so that Bashir couldn’t breathe anymore don’t get me wrong Bashir was not missed he was a criminal he had never worked in his life he was doing a lot of robberies um but yes the uh the police had a bit of a struggle because they couldn’t actually prove which of the four did it cuz um uh uh Ali had called some of his colleagues to assist so the four of them were present um and they couldn’t actually prove who did the Fatal the Fatal kick um so they were actually acquitted they couldn’t um they couldn’t prove that um any any of them had uh had killed him anyway this is the Golden Lion now some of you might have heard of this Pub it is a it is a green King Pub we were talking earlier about the tide system so when you go to the the Golden Lion you buy a beer it’s it’s most likely going to be a green King Brewery uh beer and it is here that the the INF famous serial killer Dennis Nelson used to um uh to to to Target some of his uh some of his victims so for the ones that don’t know Dennis Nelson was um uh well he’s a he’s a bit like a like a British uh Jeff ammer they actually started the killing the very same year um 1978 they have a lot of in common they both uh targeted gay men not always but they both targeted men um there were some cannibalism involved although Dennis didn’t actually eat them but he did he did cook them um there are differences though um um Nelson was a a great lover of of animals when dmer was um was not as uh as you you you probably know um Nelson was um it’s actually rare very often the serial killers they that you can see their behaviors with animals are not are not right um Dennis was absolutely uh absolutely in love with his dog bleep um there was a a a day that he actually saved the little bird he took him to his office he worked on Denmark Street um at the job Center quite close to here at the job center he used to bring them some um Curry for Christmas and mold wine that he would have baked in um or cooked I should say in a big uh frying pan I’ll show you the frying uh the the saucepan there that’s the same sauce pan in which he would have boiled some of his victim’s head so the very the curry they had was cooked uh uh in the same uh sauce span why cook someone if you’re not going to eat them Lori interesting question Lori is asking well he was actually trying to find a way to dispose of the bodies um the the the thing with with Nelson is that he was uh necro filc he according to his biographer he killed for company and he um he would actually keep those young men’s body in his flat for a while he would speak to them them he would wash them he would base them he would sit and watch television with them when um the second victim was a Canadian uh that was actually all over the news so he would have been there in his flat sat with the dead body of that young Canadian man looking for the news report of the the missing men I mean that that’s mad and then he had to dispose of the bodies now in his first um in his first uh uh um accommodation uh 195 Melrose Avenue that’s next to wimbley he had full access to a garden he was on the ground floor so he actually plac them under the floorboard every so often he would he would open the floorboard to to have a look at them and eventually when they were too badly rotten he had to dispose of the body but in Melos Avenue he uh because he had the garden he actually burned them in the garden that was very visible of course but he put some rubber like tires on top and some of the local kids actually came to dance around the fire um but then he moved to a different flight at 23 conle Gardens in Mell Hill then he was on the Artic flat and um he had to find other ways to get rid of the bodies so that’s when he started boiling the heads to apologies if it’s a bit too uh too much but to to basically remove the Flesh and when he finally got CAU some some are tried to argue that he was insane to be to be honest he he wasn’t he was he was in full capacity of his mind but it is mad to be able to boil somebody’s head for hours somebody you knew somebody you had slept with and in the same time make yourself a cup of coffee and and and and and butter slice of toast so it is absolutely mad and in this very Pub we don’t know exactly how many victims it targeted here because we don’t know we’ve not identified all the victims when um the uh well the story really started for the press in um in 18 uh sorry 1984 83 when um the the plumbers were called for a blocked drain and as they looked into the drain they found pieces of fingers and human remains so the plumber actually called the police the thing is Dennis himself was actually the one writing to the landlords to complain about his drain and the police officers of course decided to wait for him and uh when he came home the police uh was like oh Dennis Nelson can we speak to you about your drains and Dennis was like since when the police is interesting in drains anyway and uh uh he got arrested cuz they got to the flat it smelled horrible and he was like okay where is the rest of the body Denise pointed out towards the the cupboard when he had a couple of black bags black um liner bags and the police officer was like yeah I can smell it anyway they arrested him and as they are in their car towards the police station the police officer was like is it is it one or two bodies and then he said no I think it’s 16 and that’s how they realized that it was going to be a big big case poor plumber says Michelle well uh the plumber actually sent the the the story to the Press he sold the story uh so the police had the Press on their back through the investigation so poor plumber I think he made a bit of money out of it um anyway so we don’t know how many victims only eight of out of the 15 cuz he then went down to 15 were um were uh identified and um the um the the the young man that was uh well we don’t know how many young men were targeted here at the Golden Lion but at least one of them survived his name was Paul knobs he was a 19 years old student um and he was uh he was having a drink at lunchtime here because he suffered from a hangover you see so he had to have a quick paint to um to to to fight that and when he got into the PB Denis was there celebrating his 36 years old the two had a chat they went together to buy some books um then Dennis invited the young man to his flat for a dinner he was also known as the kindly killer because he often um picked up some homelesses or some drag artist or or some sex workers to offer her a bed offer them a bed or a dinner for the night and then through the night he would strangle them sometimes strangle them and then um drown them to to to to finish the the job now Paul um Paul knobs survived we don’t know why he actually he actually gave him a sleeping bag and he was like oh careful with the the the Cod you know you don’t want to get the trapped around your neck and um Paul actually woke up because the the the dog beep was bleep was licking his face at that point um well at that point uh um Dennis believed he had killed him but when he realized the guy was still alive instead of finishing to kill him the guy was very unwell he was he was on his bed he was very confused very drunk Dennis could have then killed him itam but he actually started to rescue him he made him some hot soup and he tried to keep him warm and so the young boy was so confused he didn’t know if Denis was his killer or his savior he actually went to the police but when at the police station in the late’ 70s you have a hysterical drunk young gay men screaming murder murder well they actually replied to him no love it’s a sex game that you did you know um so could he have been stopped earlier yes absolutely but once they realized I mean the police did an amazing job um if you wanted to hear a bit more about about Dennis Nelson there’s an night TV drama that came out a couple of years ago that’s actually quite realistic it’s called Dez cuz he was known as um as Dez so yeah horrible horrible Killer really um and yeah he probably was just scared of rejection so he would um kill those men to keep them with him he was definitely a necrophiliac we now believe that his troubles might have started at the age of six when his granddad the only person he was close to was his granddad um he was a fisherman in um Northern Scotland um and he died at Sea and dennise didn’t know that one day his mom came and she was like hey do you want to see your granddad come to the kitchen and his granddad was dead in a Cuffin so from that point his ideas of Love and Death were mixed and that’s probably how his um trouble started anyway let’s move on this building here um o today um that used to be a bank and guess what there was a murder as well in the bank in um there was a there was a young man here that um that uh um suffered from epilepsy and well there are some um some evidence that prove that he potenti also suffered from um uh um some kind of uh uh seizures but they’re called they called absence seizures it’s like you’re gone you’re You’re gone for for a a little moment physically your muscles are not contracted on on everything like in a normal seizure but your eyes are empty and your behavior is erratic and you don’t remember a minute later um he his name was John Edmund Murphy and he um he uh uh that was in in 1908 so you get an idea he his sister was also epileptic and he was um he was very short of of money um he couldn’t pay his landlord um two weeks prior to the event apparently there was another incident his sister went to the theater and when she came back home she could hear some um noises so she was very scared of course and she went upstairs to her bedroom where um she could still hear the noises she looked everywhere behind the door no one was there and eventually she looked under the bed um and she she saw her brother um that was half naked under her bed um grinding his sff he came out out of the bed and he actually tried to strangle her the police was called but the sister of course did not want to charge uh press charges against so that they dropped the case but apparently he refused to apologize because he didn’t remember so according to him nothing else had happened so we knew he had this type of of of episodes of violence and and seizures that he clearly wouldn’t remember one day he uh he went to buy a gun on a knife and and the next day he told his land lady that he was going to have the money he came here to the bank he didn’t even ask for money he just came in and shoot the the poor the poor cashier I said it was a bank it was a bank on a bureau the change and um as you can probably see by the way we are now in chinat town we are on Gerard Street um and the um so yeah he he killed he killed the gentleman at the bank but he didn’t take any money then he ran down the street and he actually stabbed a police officer as well and of course he he did get arrested quite quickly and all that and he was judged but he claimed he didn’t remember now the the jury didn’t believe him they said it was premeditated because he had told this land lady that he was going to come with the money but um yeah sadly he was he was hanged when really it does look like it could have been a miscarriage of Justice it does look like he could have been genuinely under some kind of of of of an absent uh seizure anyway we are now in the beautiful China so Chinatown was not always here it used to be in Lim house it used to be um much closer to the Ducks but after the second world war this area was actually a bit damaged it was very poor and um full of sex workers so that’s when a few Chinese restaurants started to move here and uh betting shops as well people in Hong Kong uh used to bet a lot well we we do here as well and uh uh eventually they had a a grant from government a million and in I think it’s in 1985 that the the Duke and The Duchess of gluster came to the de opening ceremony so all those arches they’ve been uh they’ve been paid with the ground anyway let me turn around cuz we have one more murder around here so this uh arcade here the pay to the play to win I was going to say pay to win but yes you have to pay to win as well so the the play to win arcade um they uh they had had probably the most horrible murder that will uh will’ll mention tonight it was um a young man called Victor castig that was the uh the the the security here it’s uh it’s it’s interesting because castig in Spanish it actually means the the the executor The Punisher so that’s quite ironic really he was not Spanish he was from the Philippines but you might know in Tagalog and the Filipino languages you have a lot of Spanish language because of um well the Spanish influence of course and um he worked as a security because he was too short to to join the Army or the police and um he had moved to uh to to the UK because of his wife he uh he had met in the Philippines a couple of experts and he started to uh to date the lady then they divorced he married her he moved to the UK and had um and had um a passport and um he developed a bit of a grudge against his colleague because he was going to go for a promotion they didn’t give it to him his personality changed he became really uh really um nasty for the next couple of weeks until he was eventually sacked and well instead of just getting on with his life he decided to ask um uh four teenagers to um to uh uh sorry I’m getting a bit distracted cuz everyone is staring at me to um uh to to uh to come inside and literally rub the shop he knew everything he knew where the safe was he knew where the money was so he convinced four little uh uh teenagers to come with him and um they they bought some fake guns they were literally toys but inside the arcade it’s quite dark so they came up with those those toy guns they threatened the staff they actually took the four staff members into the safe lock room in the in the basement they took the money the equivalent in uh in today’s money we are in the 60s to give you an idea the equivalent of 20,000 PS and the plan originally apparently was to lock the staff in there the four of them so they would be in there until the morning and the the robbers would have time to run and go quite far away but at the last moment so he locked the stuff in there he got out a bottle of white Spirit a few matches and he literally set them on fire now the four teenagers that were with him they were like no no what’s what you doing what you doing that’s not the plan uh but that was too late he locked the safe and uh uh and he literally loged them into their death well luckily two of them survived um but they were terribly burned and it’s probably the worst the worst possible way to die it to be locked in into a safe room with a fire there’s nothing nothing you can possibly do so yeah horrible horrible guy and all of that for like what 5K cuz if you divide with four so yeah horrible um horrible murder anyway we are now in uh in r SC um you can see the name of the street here is written in English and then in Chinese characters so that’s the the the ccil Westminster Council that writes it in in Chinese so that’s quite cool as well it’s for the the local community so this is uh this is report’s cour at the back there’s a pub called the Blue post we have actually Four pubs in London called the Blue post because in SoHo I mean because um when Soho was um um a hunting ground it was um they had some some blue post to to to to show the limit of the grounds so that’s why we have them I’m not going to go too far deep cuz I think the signal might drop but guess what there’s been another attack here not a murder but it could have been uh at number eight here there was a uh another one of those Clip Joints and um so same as we mentioned earlier you know the type of businesses where you’d have a a very pretty lady outside this time this this one was called Morin very pretty lady and there was a a gentleman from uh from Australia he was known as Ted he came came to chat up and she’s like oh you you’re looking for girls oh come downstairs I’ll I’ll chat with you it’s um it’s four pounds for a for a quick one and it’s eight pounds for for all night that would be uh much more in today’s money of course and um at no point did she say sex or you know but they playfully they play with you they make you believe that that’s what you get so then went down he paid 8 pound he actually paid an extra 2 pound for whatever whatever they wanted to charge him on top of that and then they ended up in a dark room with other men just a couple of benches there on a a dirty bar and uh just chatting to a lady and nothing happened they chatted weirdly sat on that bench for like 15 minutes he quickly realized that there was going to be no sex whatsoever so he realized he had been conned and he demanded his money minin said no there’s nothing I can do I’ve I’ve already given it to the BOS we we we’ we’ve booked you in we cannot do refunds and he was Furious he actually left he came back with his gun for from Australia and uh he uh when he came back it was no longer Morin at the gate at the door it was another pretty girl he was like I want to see the other one storm downstairs with his with his gun and the the other girl at the top she was screaming he’s got a gun he’s got a gun come on help and um when uh a gentleman heard it his name was Roy he actually went on to help he didn’t know if he should believe the young girl but he went downstairs and he was like who’s got a gun and Ted goes it’s me do you want it and there probably was a bit of a confusion there because Roy probably understood do you want it do you want the gun so he he went to grab it and Ted probably saw it as an attack he probably meant do you want it do you want to be shot and he actually shot he shot ho in the stomach then he grabbed his his 10 pounds cuz Morin was in the process of giving it to him um run away on the street he actually fired again a shot on the street that way went into a random gentleman luckily that was just uh it went into his neck but it didn’t um the injuries were not too bad so Roy and the other gentleman were were rushed into hospital but Ted managed to escape so he was officially on the run and to be honest he probably wouldn’t have been found if he didn’t hide his gun under his bed and in his flatmate that had seen the news that had seen the blood and that accidentally found the G he actually gave him out to to the police luckily Roy survived he uh he was in hospital for a few weeks but he survived so um Ted was um uh jailed for 10 years but not with int to to murder uh they um they didn’t go uh they didn’t go that far anyway before we go I’ve got a last property for you I think it’s in this one to be honest they all look the same so it could be in any of those um and it is let me check before I say anything wrong it is uh two bedroom Flats uh two bedroom to rent so we’re looking for a monthly rent how much would you pay for a two-bedroom in uh in this beautiful building here so in the heart of Chinatown again bear in mind it could be a little bit noisy there we go I’ll show you the photos so we’re looking for a monthly rent for a two-bedroom [Music] flat how much would you pay for that two bedrooms for [Music] rent 4,590 says Trish 4K MIT says five Michelle says 2K 4,300 says ronie you’re quite close Ron Seth you’re not too far either I think hone is a bit closer 5K says Sarah three 3K says um was Marry let’s see if we have any more I’ll show you the answer so that’s 3,700 months so that’s uh quite a bit less than what we’ve seen earlier because this is a two-bedroom when in in so it was a the same price for a one bedroom um so yeah probably not the quietest location but quite convenient if you if you enjoy going to the theaters or going for a drink very very um very nice uh very very central location anyway it’s going to be the end of the tour let me uh let me show you my face again and let me know in the chat if you have any questions for me if not thank you very much for coming today hope you enjoyed it as usual if any of you dropped me a little uh a little tips on PayPal or buy me a coffee or or or straight on YouTube um thank you very much in advance it’s very much appreciated it is thanks to your generosity that I can do what I love so um so yeah your support is always very much appreciated um not close to being able to afford it well me neither me neither thanks Lori thanks Barbara next to Linda so Thursday we’re going to Cen so that’s um in South London we’ve never been there before so we’ve got uh we’ve got a a um a Victorian Cemetery we’ve got a workhouse we’ve got a bit of street art and some interesting murders as well and uh talking about murders by the way guys before I forget um you know when I get a lot of my sources from one person whether it’s a book or a podcast or whatever I like to give them a bit of credit a lot of the murders I’ve mentioned tonight um if it wasn’t for one podcast I probably wouldn’t know about them so it’s one guy called Murder mile he does some podcast about murders in SoHo so I just wanted to give him a bit of credit really cuz um cuz I’ve uh recently discovered him thank you Linda and um I’ve seen a tip thanks thanks ever so much for uh for the tip um Linda thanksor thanks ly thanks everyone for coming tonight and um hopefully I’ll see some of you on Thursday if not it’s not scheduled yet I need to check the trains and everything but um on Monday I’m taking you back to skes I’m going uh I’m going there for a for a photography job this weekend um some of you might know I do uh I used to work as a photographer before to be a tour guide and I do some kids uh football tournament photography so that’s why I’m up I’m up in skes this weekend so before to catch the train back on Monday I’ll schedule a tour of of skes so um that’s something to to look forward to as well some of you might have been we’ve been there together but two years ago at at at the time of um at the time of hego so it’s been a while it’s probably time to um to go back anyway I don’t see any more questions you love SK perfect cool so see you on Thursday or maybe on Monday if you cannot make it on Thursday have a great evening or a great morning whatever time it is for you wherever you are in the world and uh thanks every much for very much for your tips if any of you uh left any on PayPal or buy me a coffee and uh and have a good evening bye-bye

The dice have spoken this time I will have to take you to a car park… As usual we’ll look at property prices in the area.

To rewatch the live dice throwing session:

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4 Comments

  1. Wonderful tour, Nat. I'm so sorry I had to bail early but of course I caught the rest of the tour on replay. Fantastic Chinatown shots! Looking forward to Croydon on Thursday.

  2. Wow! That was spectacular- you were getting some serious double takes from people in the street when you were talking about boiling heads! 😂 Absolutely brilliant!

  3. Amazing tour! Packed with so much detail. Thank you very much! Your subscription numbers should be so much higher, the quality of your videos is awesome.

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