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Bob
10th July 2010, 00:30
Anyone got relatives in Belfast, Northern Ireland? If so, they might be able to take part in filming the new series of 'Sons of Anarchy':

The hit US TV show ‘Sons of Anarchy’ is filming part of the new series in Belfast. The drama series is normally set in the fictional Californian town of Charming, but filming has moved to Northern Ireland to cover an historic flashback.

Producer Kevin Jackson explained "The Sons of Anarchy are a sort of Hell's Angels chapter set up a couple of generations back by a legendary figure in the series and still run by his family. At an early stage in series one they establish a link with Belfast and throughout series one and two encounter many difficulties with rival factions in their own town.

"In series three, the creator Kurt Sutter has decided to take it out of California and bring some of the story to Belfast. There will be a very significant storyline through all of that season which includes some filming here and much filming in California."

Local people will be included in filming, as the production needed lookalikes for some lead characters.

burden2
23rd July 2010, 00:48
This is a great series, I've got the first two seasons and the third is due for release in the US in September-can't wait!

LBD
23rd July 2010, 02:29
I was in Ireland last week:yes:
Flew into Belfast on Ryan air:gob:Budget travel? mate you could not pay me to travel with them again:angry:
Drove down to Dublin same day...n it rained the entire way until we arrived in Eire then:sunny:
Checked into a hotel on copper alley with friendly staff and headed of to the Guiness store house:beer:and :drinkup:
Then to the the Temple bar part of Dublin for more :drinkup:lots of :killingme and lots of singing and :violin:and more :drinknsin
Next day a drive accross country to Sligo in the West, friendly folks...good food.

Sligo we caught up with old family and more:drinknsin for a couple of days...more friendly folks, good Craic etc

Then up North still in Eire, great scenery etc until off the Ferry accross to Port Rush:gob: on the 12th of July:Oops:

Pommy flags and Orange lodge flags were flying from every lamp post and window....even the kerbs were red white and blue:sick:....God save the Queen slogans painted on the road
The weather turned wet and :cold: and the local mood was colder than the beer I had that night....which was not hard. The B and B would only take pounds cash not euro or visa inspite of the sign in the window...and in advance. We could not leave luggage at the B and B:gob: we had to put it back in the car and find an ATM then return....

Everything in NI was 20% more expensive than Eire

Next time its fly into Dublin and spend a couple of weeks south of the border...

I :love: Eire.....

Northern Ireland Belfast included can kiss my :shake:

Omega1
26th July 2010, 10:13
SOA rocks, hangin out for the third season myself

HenryDorsetCase
26th July 2010, 11:28
Another SOA fan here.

Jackie boy
19th January 2011, 10:12
If you went to OZ would you try and pay in NZ $ so why be surprised that people in the north wont take the euro they use the pound. You could not have picked a worse time to visit going on the 12th July your lucky you did not get hi-jacked.
I was born and brought up in Belfast and it has a lot of problems but tell me a city that does not.

NordieBoy
20th January 2011, 08:03
The B and B would only take pounds cash not euro or visa inspite of the sign in the window...and in advance.


If you went to OZ would you try and pay in NZ $ so why be surprised that people in the north wont take the euro they use the pound.

If they say they take visa, they should take visa...

Smifffy
20th January 2011, 08:33
If you went to OZ would you try and pay in NZ $ so why be surprised that people in the north wont take the euro they use the pound. You could not have picked a worse time to visit going on the 12th July your lucky you did not get hi-jacked.
I was born and brought up in Belfast and it has a lot of problems but tell me a city that does not.


Hi Jackie Boy, welcome to KB, that was apretty awesome thread dredge for your first post, chur.

:niceone:

Bob
27th January 2011, 03:37
Then up North still in Eire, great scenery etc until off the Ferry accross to Port Rush:gob: on the 12th of July:Oops:

Pommy flags and Orange lodge flags were flying from every lamp post and window....even the kerbs were red white and blue:sick:....God save the Queen slogans painted on the road
The weather turned wet and :cold: and the local mood was colder than the beer I had that night....which was not hard. The B and B would only take pounds cash not euro or visa inspite of the sign in the window...and in advance. We could not leave luggage at the B and B:gob: we had to put it back in the car and find an ATM then return....

Everything in NI was 20% more expensive than Eire :shake:

To clarify: Eire is NOT part of the United Kingdom. Northern Ireland IS part of the United Kingdom. Eire signed up to the Euro. UK did not. So there is no reason for anyone in the province to take Euro.

About things being cheaper in Eire - oddly enough, they were even cheaper when the Irish Punt was still the currency. When the Euro came in, there were all sorts of 'rounding' exercises going on, with the result that prices were bumped up.

NordieBoy
27th January 2011, 06:49
When the Euro came in, there were all sorts of 'rounding' exercises going on, with the result that prices were bumped up.

No Swedish rounding there.

1 pound 29p, so that gets rounded up to 50p and it's what, Tuesday, so that's 75p, plus blarny tax so just make it an even 3 pounds. No, no, thank you.