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Meet the ‘tattoo minister' who wards off demons in his Times Square parlor

Meet the ‘tattoo minister' who wards off demons in his Times Square parlor

New York Post09-05-2025

Tattoo unto others as you would have them tattoo unto you.
Tucked in a third-floor parlor above the bustling streets of Times Square lies the only 'tattoo ministry' in the world — where artist Tommy Houlihan plays God deciding what tattoos his customers are allowed to get and where they can get them.
'One day, God is going to say, 'Why did you put this little demon next to this girl's pelvis?' What am I going to say, 'For money?' ' Houlihan, 55, told The Post.
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'I have to answer for it one day.'
9 Tommy Houlihan's Times Square tattoo shop doubles as a Catholic 'ministry.'
Stephen Yang
The lifelong Hell's Kitchen resident requires customers to keep it clean, only tattooing certain parts of the body while doling out G-rated images — and miraculous medals to all who stop, hoping that the iconography will help his customers convert to the Catholic faith.
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Most visitors to the Manhattan shop accept the token willingly, but there are a few who refuse the tiny oval medal — including one woman who he says was clearly possessed.
'She started debating me and said, 'You Catholics and your cute little purgatory.' All I could think is that this woman's actually manifesting that possession. She's under attack in some way and is showing through this,' the tattoo artist said.
What people don't know is that the ink of a tattoo not only punctures the flesh but can invite demons to take over the soul, Houlihan claimed.
9 Houlihan hands out miraculous medals to everyone who walks through his shop's door.
Stephen Yang
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9 The medal is said to instantly convert people to Catholicism.
Stephen Yang
9 Houlihan was born a Catholic but became extra pious three years ago.
Stephen Yang
That's why Houlihan refuses to take on any sacrilegious artwork, ranging from ouji boards and angel numbers to inverted crosses and images of the Virgin Mary with her breasts exposed. Some anime and fictional characters are even too disrespectful for Houlihan to ink.
'Harry Potter is absolutely satanic. I mean, JK Rowling, one of the things about Harry Potter was to draw Christian kids to the Wiccan faith,' Houlihan claimed. 'She said that. I believe it was on Christmas Eve and on an English radio show in 2016, and they yanked it off the air. You can't find.'
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Because of his location in the heart of the Crossroads of the World, Houlihan typically deals with tourists looking to get commemorative pieces of their trip to the Big Apple, rather than something more sinister.
But there's still the issue of the placement of a requested tattoo, he said.
9 Houlihan refuses to tattoo any art that is sacrilegious, references demons or invokes sexuality.
Stephen Yang
'It's not always about a satanic piece, but it's the intent,' Houlihan said.
'Nothing wrong with getting a butterfly, but if she wants a butterfly fluttering across her pelvic area, I'm not doing it,' he said of prospective female customers.
As a tattoo artist for three decades, Houlihan previously inked plenty of impious artwork on clients but had a literal come-to-Jesus moment roughly three years ago when he met Zachary King — who claims to be a reformed satanic 'high wizard' who left the occult after being instantly converted through the miraculous medal.
9 Most customers accept the medal when it is offered to them, according to Houlihan.
Tommy Houlihan
9 Many of Houlihan's clients are tourists looking for pieces that commemorate their trip to the Big Apple.
Tommy Houlihan
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That's when Houlihan, a lifelong Catholic, dove deeper into his faith and began handing out the same miraculous medal to everyone who walks through his shop's doors in hopes of changing more lives.
At any given time, Houlihan might have Gregorian chants or a reading from the Theologians over his shop's speakers to ward off what he calls evil spirits and demons.
His approach seems to have worked on some — including a woman who walked in wanting a Betty Boop with devil horns and a tail inked on her hip bone.
'I said, 'I'm not going to do it. You're turning it into a demon, it's obviously demonic … and I'm not going to tattoo you there no matter what because you're trying to make yourself more sexually attracted by putting this tattoo here. That's sinful,' ' Houlihan recalled.
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9 Houlihan refused to do a variety of 'demonic' tattoos, including oujie boards and Harry Potter-themed art.
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'I explained this to her, and she said she hadn't thought of it that way. I think that if I had not given her that medal, that she might be a little more hostile about it and gave me an attitude, but she wasn't. So that's the kind of graces that come with this.'
Houlihan himself was once covered with 'very violent images,' such as the extraterrestrial ripping out of John Hurt's chest from the 1979 movie 'Alien, which he said he had done during a rebellious phase.
9 Houlihan admits he was once inked with 'violent' tattoos that he's since had covered up.
Stephen Yang
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He became a tattoo artist in 1989 and worked in illegal parlors for nearly a decade until tattooing became legal in 1997, he said.
Houlihan believes that tattooing itself isn't sinful but that the community is a 'den of vipers' riddled with an affinity for the dark and violent, which he hopes to be a counter to.
He said an exorcist once lauded him by saying, 'You're the anti-venom.'

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They might discuss ways to stay safe or use humor to cope with traumas many have experienced. Additional events might include an art show or gender-affirmative wardrobe clothing drives. He recalled a teen calling him one day, crying with gratitude because he saw Dahl-Wooley and his husband together in the community, laughing and living normal lives, which gave him the ability to see a future for himself. He was also recognized in an Oregon grocery store line by a young man who had needed help and found a video of Dahl-Wooley giving one of his talks online. 'People are paying attention whether you realize it or not,' he says. 'Sometimes just a little difference can save a life.' Kagigebi and Dahl-Wooley each hope that more visible 2SLGBTQ+ elders and younger 2SLGBTQ+ people such as the artists in the upcoming exhibit will make it easier for others to find their way and to better embrace the unique gifts they bring to the world. 'I want the Two-Spirit population to know how important and powerful they are — just as they are,' Dahl-Wooley says. 'We're sacred. We're honored, and we're respected. A lot of people need to hear that.' More information Two Spirit Advocacy Dahl-Wooley shares his story across the country, works with businesses and organizations to be more welcoming to 2SLGBTQ people and hosts events in Bemidji such as Queer Tea. Queer Indigeneity This exhibit opens Sept. 18 at the Minnesota Museum of Art in St. Paul and features 16 Indigenous artists who identify as Two Spirit, queer or gender expansive, including Giiwedin, a young artist and activist who made GLAAD's 20 Under 20 list of changemakers presented in Teen Vogue. The show will run through early 2026.

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