On Sunday
night the much anticipated “Redwater”, started on our national broadcaster RTE.
It will be screened at a later date, on the BBC, in “Old Blighty”.
Stimulating
much Facebook chatter, airwave media interest and lots of other social media
attention. You could not avoid the fact that you just had to be in front of the
goggle box, settled with a cup of tea, just after Jean delivered her Sunday
night weather forecast. The families of Waterford sat around their “Custard and
jelly”, like the good old days, and eagerly tuned in to see who they might
recognise as an extra on the drama and what scenery they could identify, being
a place they might have visited, walked or have swum.
The village
of Dunmore East would broadcast the show “Live”, on the biggish screen outside
the Strand Inn’s very own “Rub-A-Dub”. From one of the exact spots, where we
would be introduced to the very characters who will fill our Sunday nights for
the foreseeable future. Namely, Kat and Alfie, aka Jessie Wallace and Shane
Richie. These two “Eastenders’ Royalty” would be bringing, in no doubt equal
measure, their Cockney charm, “Porky pies” and lots of “Catherine Zeta Jones” to
the Sunny South East. Would you “Adam and Eve” it anyone?
Remember
folks that this drama is an offshoot of that BBC institution, screened
mercilessly, many times a week on the national broadcaster of the UK. Did we
expect to see a different format or were we going to be delivered the very same
old, just with an Irish twang? There were rumours that the whole series could
have been filmed in any number of other European destinations, Portugal or even
“Bubble and Squeak”, they were all in with a shout.
By “Friar
Tuck” the location team chose the area around the Suir Estuary. Namely, Dunmore
East, Passage, Crooke and so on. In fact we recognised all these areas in the
first episode. The opening village fun run, linking all the streets of these
villages and that “Bottle of Sauce” running seamlessly from beach to beach,
what a talented beast!
Right from
the starting title sequence, we could see that this was not going to be a run
of the mill “Eastenders’” spin off. There was “Barney Rubble” from the opening scenes,
which would set a rather dark sinister feel to the programme. There was an
early edge, that I am sure will be carried throughout the whole drama. Who
knows what “Tony Blair’s” will unfold over the next few Sunday nights?
With our
national broadcaster’s Nationwide programme, featuring Waterford very heavily
in recent weeks, we have not seen such levels of interest in all things
Waterford for some time now. It will be vital that the millions of people who
will ultimately tune into “Redwater”, to realise that like “Walford”, “Redwater”
is a fictional place. Admittedly, a “Tutti Frutti” of a place and the weather
gods appear to have done their bit as well, “Shabba Ranks”.
The
location is a beautiful place on the coast of our Waterford County and as such
there will be a huge effort needed to absorb this message and deliver
additional tourism Euros across the whole county. If we are to hear the tills
ringing, “Cab Ranks” being filled on the back of this drama, that will reach
millions of people both in Ireland and the UK, then we must develop a strategy and
a “Jackie Chan” that works for us.
All the
stakeholders involved in these projects, must now work together to capitalise
on this unprecedented free publicity we are securing on prime time viewing
slots. Coupled with the new Waterford Greenway’s impetus, we have a unique
tourism message that will surely draw many more “Billy Bunters” to our “Roger
Moore”.
I suppose that
the secret would be the many, many independent operators, should push towards
developing their own marketing and awareness campaigns? To this extent they
need to be encouraged to do so.
With a bit
of luck we can all get “Sheffield United” at just what “Redwater” might bring
to us. Who knows we might even see more “Bees and Honey” coming to Waterford?
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