- The battle for the brave new world of New York's most iconic photograph - "Lunch atop a skyscraper" taken by Charlie Ebbets in 1932, of the iron workers taking a meal break from their deadly work building the Rockefeller Center.
- Sixty-nine floors above a 1932 Manhattan skyline, rival Irish and Italian rivet-gangs compete to see who is the fastest at laying steel, and in a world where you are paid by how efficient you work, there is no room for mistakes. But when one of the Irish rivet-gang members slips and falls to his death, they must learn to forgive and trust or risk loosing the little financial security they have.—Jes Bickhart
- Sixty-nine floors above a 1932 Manhattan skyline, rival Irish and Italian rivet-gangs compete to see who is the fastest at laying steel, and in a world where you are paid by how efficient you work, there is no room for mistakes. But when one of the Irish rivet-gang members slips and falls to his death, they must learn to forgive and trust or risk loosing the little financial security they have.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content