• Set in London's East End in the 1950s, it stars newcomer Jessica Raine, Miranda Hart and Jenny Agutter.

    BBC: Call the Midwife set to return for a second series

  • Initiatives have included Tech City, aimed at luring start-ups from across Europe and elsewhere to set up in London's East End.

    WSJ: Is the U.K.'s Love Affair With the Internet at Risk?

  • This subculture, growing in enclaves like Portland, Oregon, Williamsburg, New York and London's East End, was quickly appropriated by the mainstream.

    BBC: The rise of ironic Christmas jumpers

  • Born in London's East End on 8 April 1943, Herbert won a scholarship to St Aloysius Grammar School in Highgate at the age of 10.

    BBC: James Herbert: UK horror author dies aged 69

  • It was a cue for the families who had left London's East End in the middle of the 20th Century to move on again at the start of the 21st.

    BBC: Why have the white British left London?

  • That's Jimmy Hook (Rhys Ifans), a former man-about-town who has washed up in London's East End, from which he plots endlessly to claw his way back into society.

    WSJ: Neverland on SyFy; I Hate My Teenage Daughter on Fox: Television Reviews by Nancy deWolf Smith

  • Iron Maiden started life in London's East End in 1975.

    CNN: Hands up, I'm an Iron Maiden fan

  • Germany, too, had its share of fanatics, including Johann Most, the editor of an incendiary New York newspaper, Freiheit, and many of the Jewish anarchists who congregated in London's East End.

    ECONOMIST: The anarchists

  • The editorial begins with a grim picture of Stepney Green in London's East End, where it says "tuberculosis is raging" in living quarters where up to 10 people are living in one room.

    BBC: Row over 'crisis-hit' Britain article

  • Like Clement Attlee, he worked after university at Toynbee Hall, a university foundation in London's East End, where he was able to see the wretchedness of the poor at first hand and to be shocked by it.

    ECONOMIST: In Sir William��s shadow

  • Teeth-jarring fights and the gruesome discovery of a "ripped tart" in the shadow-filled streets of London's East End are the first glimpses viewers have of BBC America's new crime drama, all set to the eerie soundtrack of a grating violin.

    CNN: Life after Jack the Ripper

  • Tony, a tough little Cockney from London's East End, wanted to be a jockey and didn't make it, but he managed to pass The Knowledge, the formidably difficult test for London taxi drivers, then buy his own taxi and earn a good living for himself and his family.

    WSJ: Film Review: Life, Not by the Numbers by Joe Morgenstern

  • The tiny evacuees, many from London's impoverished East End, were not always eagerly received.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Graff grew up on Commercial Road in London's gritty East End, where he spent his first seven years living in a single room with his Jewish Rumanian immigrant mother, behind the corner sweet shop his Russian father opened just before leaving to fight in World War II.

    FORBES: King of Bling

  • Mr Rose, who as an historian of the book belongs to a growing sub-discipline, has written a masterly account of the way in which the British working classes (and that term must remain emphatically plural, since Mr Rose moves from the landlocked rural poor, to London's Jewish East End, to the clattering factory towns of north-western England) have taught, soothed and entertained themselves through their own intellectual resources.

    ECONOMIST: Cultural history

  • Growing up in London's working-class East End, the son of a teaching-assistant mother and truck-driver father, Mr. Marsan says he knew he wanted to become an actor from an early age.

    WSJ: Eddie Marsan: Getting Into Character

  • It's a scene more reminiscent of the Middle East, rather than the London's West End.

    BBC: 10 THINGS WE DIDN'T KNOW THIS TIME LAST WEEK

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