logo
Our beautiful seaside town was slammed as a rundown DUMP in viral TikTok video – but here's what it's REALLY like

Our beautiful seaside town was slammed as a rundown DUMP in viral TikTok video – but here's what it's REALLY like

Scottish Sun14 hours ago

See photos of Folkestone at its finest taken during The Sun's visit below
SEA IT FOR YOURSELF
SEA IT FOR YOURSELF Our beautiful seaside town was slammed as a rundown DUMP in viral TikTok video – but here's what it's REALLY like
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
UNIMPRESSED locals in a popular seaside town have hit back after it was labelled a "dump" in a viral TikTok video.
The post, shared by Olivia Rose, includes unflattering clips of Folkestone, Kent - going on to amass a staggering 500,000 views and 24,000 likes.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
15
Shop owner Kory Redmond, who escaped city life for the quieter seaside town
Credit: Stuart Brock
15
Locals like Phillip Jordan don't agree with the TikTok video
Credit: Stuart Brock
15
Folkestone was recently crowned Best Place to Live in South East England
Credit: Stuart Brock
Clips were taken on a dull day with the sarcastic caption: 'Come to Folkestone for the bank hol they said.'
The footage, from May, showed boarded up shops and less appealing parts of the town, including the Grand Burstin Hotel and dilapidated former Debenhams building in Sandgate Road.
It comes after Folkestone was last year crowned Best Place to Live in South East England by the Sunday Times.
Many of the almost 500 comments on Olivia's post disagree with her bashing of the town, with one saying: "Folkestone's actually a really lovely place."
Another said: "Why did you go to all the horrible parts instead of the nice parts?"
One person added: "Who told you to come to Folkestone for the bank holiday though realistically."
However, others supported Olivia, writing: "People keep trying to romanticise Folkestone and it's literally a s***hole."
Another described it as "b******s".
The Sun decided to pay a visit to see what locals and visitors really think.
Rebecca Greenway, 29, is among the disgruntled residents that disagree with the video.
Trendy English seaside town has rooftop bar that 'feels like the Med'
She said: 'They have just picked the bad areas to nitpick. You judge a book by its cover.
'It is their first impression but when you get to know Folkestone you can fall in love with it when you find all the niche little places and meet the people.'
Rebecca manages the Folkestone branch of Flo's Pie & Mash, a popular spot among locals.
Flo's has been in Folkestone for two years, but Rebecca has lived in the area since she was eight years old, and it is now where she is raising a family of her own.
She said: 'I love Folkestone. I like the community feel of it.
'Everything is so locally based and everyone gets on as a community - I really enjoy it.'
They have just picked the bad areas to nitpick. You judge a book by its cover. It is their first impression but when you get to know Folkestone you can fall in love with it when you find all the niche little places and meet the people.
Rebecca Greenway
Rebecca also insists that it isn't just locals who love the area but visitors also sing its praises.
She added: 'I just had a customer in who has come from Ramsgate and never been to Folkestone before and he was like 'I love it'.'
In reference to the controversial TikTok post, she concluded: 'They just pick the areas and just show the bad and not the good.
'When you come at the right time it is brilliant.'
Local residents Melissa and Leon Reed share Rebecca's disapproval of this latest dig.
Melissa, 29, has lived in Folkestone her whole life and said: 'I 100% disagree with the TikTok.'
Along with her husband Leon, 24, and Tiana thir French Bulldog, the majority of Melissa's extended family also live in the area.
She added: 'Nearly all my family live here, my dad is a fisherman on one of the boats down there.
'We have a little bit of everything here - sandy beaches, pebble beaches, lots of new bars.
'It's gotten so much better in recent years.'
15
Sam Brown, of Sandy's Fish and Chips, which attracts a lot of tourists in the summer
Credit: Stuart Brock
15
Pals Kelsey and Karla with baby Romeo and their dogs on a stroll
Credit: Stuart Brock
15
Rebecca Greenway of Flo's Pie & Mash shop has been serving Folkestone locals and tourists for the last two years
Credit: Stuart Brock
Other locals seem to share this belief, with one voicing: 'When you look out to sea, you think we are on the edge of England. It couldn't be a more amazing site.'
Another also added: 'There are lots of things to do with the kids. They love it here.'
Owner of Captain's Table cafe, Yasar Dalkilic, has lived in Folkestone for over 20 years.
In response to the damning TikTok he said: 'I really strongly disagree. Back in the day it was not a very nice place to live.
'But now, I almost feel like I'm on holiday here in the summer. Everywhere has got good places and bad places - everywhere.
'The people who made the TikTok need to come and see it for themselves with their own eyes.'
He added: 'The best thing about Folkestone is the fact that it is a seaside town.
15
Nearly all of Leon and Melissa Reed's family live in Folkestone and love it
Credit: Stuart Brock
15
Folkestone residents have been left unimpressed after a viral TikTok called their home a "dump"
Credit: Stuart Brock
15
Melissa's dad works as a fisherman in the seaside town
Credit: Stuart Brock
'There's sandy beaches and it is nice and close to London.'
Down the road from Mr Dalkilic's cafe is Sandy's Fish and Chip shop.
A member of Sandy's staff, Sam, 27, said: "Everywhere has got good places and bad places but it depends on what you make of it.
"The town is quite run down now but obviously a lot of town centres are not getting the attention they deserve and need at the moment.
"But this a really nice little harbour."
Local shopowners also urge people to ignore the TikTok video and come see Folkestone for themselves.
Kory Redmond, owner of South East Emporium, and mother to toddler, Darwin, moved from London two years ago for a slower pace of life.
She said: 'I wish we had moved sooner.
15
The owner of The Captain's Table strongly disagrees with the TikTok
Credit: Stuart Brock
15
Folkestone high street is home to lots of big name brands and independent shops
Credit: Stuart Brock
15
Local shopowners praised the community feel
Credit: Stuart Brock
'There is a big community, people actually say 'hi' and 'good morning' to you here.'
Alex, who owns the shop next door, recently launched a new beachwear business called Laes with his partner Claire.
He added: 'I have lived locally for a long long time so I have seen it change a lot, and I'd say in the past ten years it has really been on an upwards trajectory. Come visit!'
Adrian Harrison owns a family camera business which has been in Folkestone since 1920.
In response to the video, he said: 'I wouldn't say it's a dump, I'd say newcomers rather like Folkestone. It's a nice place, there are far worse.'
But one local doesn't share the views of fellow residents, as she told The Sun: 'I don't think Folkestone has a lot to offer. Look at the state of the hotel.
'The new skate park is an eyesore.'
Has your town been unfairly criticised on social media? Email amelia.morgan@thesun.co.uk
15
The seaside town is located in Kent
Credit: Stuart Brock
15
Alex has recently started trading in the area, with his partner Claire
Credit: Stuart Brock

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Two Welsh beaches named among 'most beautiful' in the UK
Two Welsh beaches named among 'most beautiful' in the UK

Wales Online

time38 minutes ago

  • Wales Online

Two Welsh beaches named among 'most beautiful' in the UK

Two Welsh beaches named among 'most beautiful' in the UK There's no denying that a visit to the beach can be a peaceful and enriching experience – and two local spots have been named among the most beautiful in the world The scenic spot is located in Wales (stock image) (Image: Loop Images, Loop Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images ) Across the globe, there are numerous picturesque beaches boasting crystal clear waters, soft sands, and breathtaking ocean views that all work together to create an appealing, charming destination. But did you know some of the best stretches of coastline are in Wales? A popular TikTok video highlighted five of the UK's most remarkable beach destinations, with two Welsh locations clinching the top two spots. The hit TikTok account Globescribe, which has amassed over 1.9 million likes across its videos, compiled a list of its top five beach picks. ‌ The video features Google Earth images of each beach, zooming in to provide details and information about each location through a fast-paced voiceover. ‌ The video begins with: "Where is the most beautiful beach in the UK? Most people know that the worst beach in the UK is probably near industrial docks or muddy coasts, so where is the most beautiful beach in the UK?" The video then proceeds to highlight the top beaches chosen. In fifth place, Bournemouth beach was commended for its "golden sand and clear blue water", as well as being a hit among families. Content cannot be displayed without consent Article continues below Taking the fourth spot, Blackpool Sands was showcased with the clarification: "Don't be confused by the name - it's not in Blackpool." It's actually nestled in Devon and is famed for being "surrounded by green hills". Luskentyre Beach claimed third place, located on the Isle of Harris in Scotland's Outer Hebrides. It is celebrated worldwide for its "white sand and turquoise waters that look like the Caribbean". Barafundle Bay in Wales came in second. Found near Stackpole Quay, Pembrokeshire, this secluded beach requires a "walk over a cliff path to reach it". ‌ However, the hike is well worth it. That's because the "hidden gem" rewards visitors with "peaceful waves" and "soft sand" that "make it feel like a private paradise". Rhossili Bay was crowned in first place. Situated at the western extremity of the Gower Peninsula, around an hour's drive from Swansea, this Welsh treasure captivates with its "massive sandy shore, dramatic views and unforgettable sunsets". Globescribe commented: "This Welsh beach is often ranked among the best in the world. If you visit once, you'll never forget it." ‌ Visit Wales also touts it as a noteworthy "iconic" location boasting "dramatic, panoramic views and good walking opportunities". Top five beaches in the UK Rhossili Bay, Gower Barafundle Bay, Pembrokeshire Luskentyre Beach, Outer Hebrides Blackpool Sands, Devon Bournemouth Beach, Dorset People shared their thoughts in the comments section – and many agreed that the Welsh have plenty of great beaches on their doorsteps. Article continues below One person said: "Rhossili beach and the blue pool. [The blue] pool inside rocks close to Rhossili is the most beautiful place". However, another disagreed with the top spot, and asserted: "BARAFUNDLE BAY NUMBER 1". So what do you think? Don't forget to leave us your thoughts in the comments section below.

Surprisingly funky Scots band introduced whole new audience to Gaelic
Surprisingly funky Scots band introduced whole new audience to Gaelic

The Herald Scotland

timean hour ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Surprisingly funky Scots band introduced whole new audience to Gaelic

Neigh hooves nor nothing. Capercaillie started off right traditional and, while that remained in their backbone, and indeed their soul, they went on to incorporate funk, jazz and pop into a fusion that brought chart success and introduced a new audience to Gaelic. They've sold more than a million albums worldwide and performed in 30-odd countries. They produced the first Gaelic-language single to reach the top 40. Credited with helping the revival of Celtic music, they followed a trail blazed by the Chieftains and the splendidly named Silly Wizard. Billboard magazine described them as 'the most exciting and vibrant band in the field of Celtic music'. That Celtic music has been described as getting the 'Capercaillie Treatment', with modern electric guitars, synthesisers, drums, loops and samples added to traditional Gaelic songs or featuring in the band's own compositions. These even incorporate swing without losing their Celtic soul. Traditional instruments include fiddle, accordion and uilleann pipes. The deal is sealed with Karen Matheson's voice, variously described as 'transcendent', 'breathtaking', and 'ethereal'. Widely regarded as the finest Gaelic singer in the world, the late Sir Sean Connery once said she had 'a throat that is surely touched by God'. TALENTED FOLK THE band, initially without Matheson and indeed a name, was formed in Taynuilt, Argyll, in 1983 by school friends Donald Shaw on accordion and Marc Duff on bodhran and whistles. Read more Rab Shaw was a teenage prodigy, steeped in traditional folk, but winning the All-Britain Accordion Championship with a Paganini classical piece. Many of the band's Gaelic songs – they also sing in English – were sourced from Matheson's family repertoire, as well as old cassette field recordings, and the School of Scottish Studies archive. Shaw and Duff joined forces with like-minded musicians from Oban, including fiddler and vocalist Joanie MacLachlan, guitar and bouzouki player Shaun Craig, and bass and fiddle player Martin MacLeod. They performed at ceilidhs and were first spotted at the 1983 Mull Music Festival by legendary radio presenter Iain MacDonald, who immediately booked them for his next show, giving the hitherto informal outfit a week to come up with a name. They chose Capercaillie in part to symbolise fighting against extinction, as with Gaelic. After building a reputation with local performances, the band added the aforementioned Matheson, who'd learned songs on her Hebridean grandmother's knee and had performed in local ceilidhs as a child before winning the silver pendant for best singer at the MOD. Capercaillie's first album, Cascade, was recorded over three days in 1984 at Edinburgh's Palladium studios. This and their second, Crosswinds, featured few modern instruments but this was soon to change. After a successful US tour in 1988, David Rome of Survival Records invited the band to London, recording several songs. This led to a licensing deal with major label industry voices thought Rome 'completely crazy', he has recalled, 'because it was just very, very left-field. You know: 'This band doesn't even sing in English'" However, Capercaillie's major-label debut, 1991's Delirium, was a watershed release introducing – on Rome's suggestion – drums to their sound. The album included Coisich a Rùin (Come on, My Love), a funkellated, 400-year-old waulking song which became the UK's first Gaelic top 40 hit. CALL OF DESTINY THE band learned about this heady chart success while standing in and around the phone box of a Little Chef roadside diner near Stirling. 'Everyone was kind of jumping around this little phone box,' recalled Rome. 'That is something I'll never forget'. Much of Delirium's songlist still figures in the repertoire of live performances. Other albums over the years have included 1997's Beautiful Wasteland, with the single of that name a lament about longing for home. It was recorded in the Andalusian mountains of Spain. 'Spain is a big territory for us,' Shaw told The Herald in 1999. 'In Spain they have a lot of respect for artists involved in Celtic languages. Areas of the north of Spain and the Basque country have a lot of affinity with what the band is doing … They look to what we're doing as a really strong parallel in the renaissance of folk music.' A year before Beautiful Wasteland, Matheson released her first solo album, The Dreaming Sea, featuring songs by husband and band co-partner described the record as 'more melancholic' than Capercaillie's 'more vibey' output. Asked in an interview with The Herald's David Belcher in 1996 if she was melancholic, she replied: 'I am, yeah, ooh yes. I find going on stage very difficult, nerve-wracking. I've learnt to cope with it over the years … but then as a child, from the age of four onwards, I sang unaccompanied at Mods and ceilidhs, and my first memories are of being terrified and standing with tears running down my face.' Karen Matheson (Image: Agency) People assumed she'd been forced to do it. But: 'It wasn't that at all. In fact, my father, who was a terrible introvert, became an accordionist in the same way, performing music because music was the community, and everybody sang or played something.' KNOW THE SCORE Last year's album ReLoved marked the band's 40th anniversary and was their first studio release since 2013's At the Heart of It All. It contains new arrangements recorded with the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, new territory for them apart from a brief encounter with the Irish Film Orchestra on their Gaelic lament Ailean Duinn, which featured on Carter Burwell's score for the film Rob Roy. Matheson, who was ordered into the British Empire (OBE) in 2006, told The Herald that year: 'As Celts, we shouldn't be precious about music either. It shouldn't be kept in a glass case. With each Capercaillie LP, we get braver and take more chances, more risks.' Yep, that's the key. Any performance, certainly at first, requires courage. As does messing with traditional music (one reviewer attributed their use of a synthesiser to the Devil). But risk has its rewards and these, say the band on their website, have 'taken us from the Brazilian rainforest to the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, not to mention into the pop charts. [But] it is the ancient Gaelic culture that still inspires us most.'

Nicole and Papa from Renault Clio ad unrecognisable three decades later
Nicole and Papa from Renault Clio ad unrecognisable three decades later

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Nicole and Papa from Renault Clio ad unrecognisable three decades later

In the 1990s, the stars of Renault Clio's TV adverts were more famous than the Prime Minister, and their names might not mean much, but their catchphrase definitely will Back in the day, they were household names. It seems unbelievable now, but the stars of the 1990s Renault Clio adverts were once more familiar to Brits than then-Prime Minister John Major and the legendary BBC Radio 1 DJ Chris Evans. And even if the actors Estelle Skornik and Max Douchin aren't instantly recognisable by name, their iconic catchphrase certainly is. Their on-screen father-daughter relationship struck a chord across the nation. "Nicole?" the debonair Frenchman would enquire, full of anticipation. "Papa!" she'd respond, with a simplicity that captured hearts. ‌ ‌ In the debut advert, Nicole would slip away while her father seemed to nap in the garden of their chateau, dashing off to secretly meet with her dashing beau in her trusty Clio. But, unbeknown to Nicole, her dad was also on a clandestine mission, whizzing off in his car to surprise a mysterious lady with flowers. Upon Nicole's return, she'd discover her father seemingly-still snoozing in the garden, culminating in their trademark two-word dialogue. The charming ads aired for seven years starting in 1991, playing a part in the whopping sales of 300,000 Renault Clios. But what became of the duo? Estelle, who brought Nicole to life, has since graced other TV projects, including From Hell, The Days That Made History and Les Lyonnais. ‌ Now 53, she starred opposite Ioan Gruffudd, portraying a romantic interest for his character Horatio Hornblower in the epic naval drama set against the backdrop of the Napoleonic Wars. But Estelle has reportedly taken a step back from the limelight, favouring family life over fame. Tying the knot with Laurent Bismuth in 1996, the couple have since had three children. Her final acting gig on record was back in 2011. ‌ Reflecting on her character in a 1998 interview with the Independent, she reminisced: "Nicole is very spontanee and I'm very spontanee. She's open to life, she's French. Nicole is part of me." Max Douchin, fondly remembered as 'Papa' and now aged 87, found his acting niche later in life. He featured in an episode of the French-Italian TV show Les Héritiers De Patmos in 2017 and graced the Paris premiere. ‌ Currently enjoying retirement in Burgundy, France, surrounded by his partner and family, he hasn't given up performing entirely – he participates in a local choir. Chatting with Mail Online, he recalled the iconic Clio adverts with a sense of nostalgia. "When I meet English people, who happen to be in Burgundy, and I speak with them, every English person I meet remembers Papa," he shared. "I have a lot of good souvenirs from that programme for the Renault Clios."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store