A collaboration between Jamie Irrepressible and his brother artist filmmaker Joel Ryan McDermott has been in development since September 2016. The film, out now, aims to ask a series of questions about community, myth, consequence, equality, and the role the imagination and events play in defining our individuality. Sadly, depending on where you live in the world and at what time in history, many young people are directly affected by short sighted political ideas and as ideas become sewn into communities as normalised social myths, I feel it is important that we always analyse, re-evaluate, ask further questions of, and look again at how ideas can impact on children whilst they learn, how children look to their families and close friends for role models, and how strong social myths can have long-lasting and negative consequences for everyone within a community. As an educational professional and artist director I have become interested in the picture postcard paradox in communities like Scarborough, the seaside town that I grew up in. Some ideas are hidden in plain sight and I urge the audience to take a second look. The film is set in 1988 during the time of the section 28 protests.