The Yardies: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (Mass update links)
(update links)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{trope}}
{{trope}}
Catch-all term for black gangsters in United Kingdom settings, although it originally applied to groups from the British West Indies (specifically Jamaica). The name comes from the common area courtyards found in Trenchtown, the impovrished housing project in West Kingston, Jamaica. While the term was originally used for all residents of Trenchtown, it later applied only to the large number of criminals and gang members that also lived there.
Catch-all term for black gangsters in United Kingdom settings, although it originally applied to groups from the British West Indies (specifically Jamaica). The name comes from the common area courtyards found in Trenchtown, the impovrished housing project in West Kingston, Jamaica. While the term was originally used for all residents of Trenchtown, it later applied only to the large number of criminals and gang members that also lived there.
Nowadays Yardies come from all backgrounds as immigration policies have allowed people of all walks of life the opportunity to come to England and live in low income neighbourhoods.
Nowadays Yardies come from all backgrounds as immigration policies have allowed people of all walks of life the opportunity to come to England and live in low income neighbourhoods.


Most of these guys are teenagers whose circumstances have dictated their life choices. They are often depicted in a negative light in media.
Most of these guys are teenagers whose circumstances have dictated their life choices. They are often depicted in a negative light in media.


See [[Gang-Bangers]] for their American counterparts.
See [[Gang-Bangers]] for their American counterparts.
Line 33: Line 33:


== [[Western Animation]] ==
== [[Western Animation]] ==
* In ''[[Sherlock Holmes in The Twenty Second Century]]'' "Yardies" was a slang term for the New London Police (as in [[Scotland Yard]]).
* In ''[[Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century]]'' "Yardies" was a slang term for the New London Police (as in [[Scotland Yard]]).


== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
== [[Tabletop Games]] ==
Line 44: Line 44:
[[Category:Organized Crime Tropes]]
[[Category:Organized Crime Tropes]]
[[Category:British Media Tropes]]
[[Category:British Media Tropes]]
[[Category:The Yardies]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Yardies, The}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]

Latest revision as of 07:08, 11 April 2017

Catch-all term for black gangsters in United Kingdom settings, although it originally applied to groups from the British West Indies (specifically Jamaica). The name comes from the common area courtyards found in Trenchtown, the impovrished housing project in West Kingston, Jamaica. While the term was originally used for all residents of Trenchtown, it later applied only to the large number of criminals and gang members that also lived there. Nowadays Yardies come from all backgrounds as immigration policies have allowed people of all walks of life the opportunity to come to England and live in low income neighbourhoods.

Most of these guys are teenagers whose circumstances have dictated their life choices. They are often depicted in a negative light in media.

See Gang-Bangers for their American counterparts.

Examples of The Yardies include:


Film

Literature

  • Ranulph Fiennes wrote The Sett, which is set amongst the Yardie drug wars of the 1980s.
  • In Anansi Boys, Fat Charlie's neighbors think he is a yardie after he gets taken to jail because Coats frames him for siphoning money from client accounts.

Live Action TV

  • The Bill
  • Jeremy in Peep Show is chided by Mark for thinking that all of his problems could be solved by the Yardies.
    • "Yardies will solve all my problems"
  • Silent Witness.
  • The Fast Show did a series of sketches involving members of the gentry acting out regional identities. One of these involved a yardie man from Kingston (Kingston-upon-Thames, that is).

Video Games

  • Grand Theft Auto 3 and other Liberty City located games have an American version of this, with a Jamaican gang called the Yardies.
  • The Getaway has a gang of Yardies, lead by Jahmal. They have fast cars with gold rims and usually carry automatic weapons.

Western Animation

Tabletop Games

  • The Yardies are one of the nastier criminal groups you can run afoul of in Shadowrun. The Mafia and Yakuza at least have some rules of engagement...