Children's author Beverley Naidoo recalled how when she went to accept the Smarties Silver Award for her book
The Other Side of Truth (2000), about two Nigerian child refugees, she heard the news of Taylor's death. As a result, she organized an ongoing donation of 10p to the
Refugee Council from every book sold. Writer
Stephen Kelman was nominated for the 2011
Man Booker Prize for his debut novel
Pigeon English, inspired in part by the Taylor killing. Actor
John Boyega, then 8 years old, and his older sister Grace were among the last people to see Taylor alive. They were friends and the Boyegas helped watch him. The
BBC programme
Panorama aired a special on the death of Taylor in April 2002. A 90-minute BBC dramatization of the events leading to his death and his family's search for justice,
Damilola, Our Loved Boy, premiered in November 2016 and won the
BAFTA Award for a single drama. In
Black History Month 2020,
Capital XTRA presenter Yinka Bokinni, a friend of Taylor, hosted a documentary about him for
Channel 4 titled
Damilola: The Boy Next Door. In 2020, 7 December was declared Day of Hope to mark two decades since Taylor's killing. ==See also==