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Archive for June, 2011

God, I love this. A nice nod to Roy Of The Rovers from Sligo, whom welcome Shamrock Rovers to the west on Friday.

They’re exciting times here on the southside of the Liffey, with both Shamrock Rovers and Saint Patrick’s Athletic flying high, and only a point between them. Pats fans have of course been here a few times in recent seasons with nothing to show for it, but we’ve been a joy to watch recently and we’ve had six victories in our last six away games, not to mention a great run at home.

While all sides have Europe on the mind, the most important game is always the next one. Roll on Friday.

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Via Keep Going Sure It’s Grand Facebook.

Laura Whitmore wearing the great ‘Keep Going Sure It’s Grand’ effort on MTV, spreading the message to the British telly audiences that we’re open for business and all that. Pity she’s from Bray. The posters are showing up in a surprising selection of Dublin boozers, last spotted by us in L.Mulligans (Stoneybatter) and The Bernard Shaw (Portobello)

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Shamrock Rovers have drawn Estonian side FC Flora Tallinn, and Saint Patrick’s Athletic are off to Iceland to play ÍBV Vestmannaeyjar. That’s their stadium above. Feck. For the northsiders at Dalymount, it’sv Sirogi of Bosnia or Olimpia Ljubijana of Slovenia. Not a single handy trip there for the capitals teams.

It’s looking like a wild one, keep an eye on extratime.ie during the day for more.

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Ad for Infamous 2 computer game

This is the ad doing the rounds for upcoming computer game ‘Infamous 2’.

O’Connell Street a burning blaze, the spire split in half and poor Jim Larkin no more. This is the oddest computer game advertisement in a while. I like how they left the GPO alone, how sensitive of them.

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This June weather is great isn’t it? Hail, wind, then sunshine, then rain, some thunder and then sunshine again. Such was yesterday in Dublin. Hail in Swords, but to be fair, the City Centre wasn’t too bad and myself and the DFallon lad went for a leisurely stroll and took in grub and a few pints.

Boojum, for anyone who hasn’t yet sampled their delights, is quite simply the business and is becoming my favourite spot for a Saturday morning hungover burrito for breakfast. Located in Mick Wallace’s “Italian Quarter,” you can’t go too far wrong at €6 for an absolutely packed burrito with shredded beef, pinto beans, rice, salsa, guacamole and cheese. Throw in a bottle of beer and you’re laughing. I strongly advise people to give it a go.

Burritos for breakfast

Crossing the Millennium Bridge I spotted the below, a great, simple piece that I’d love to see more of in the city. The glut of bloody ugly buildings with boring facades that popped up over the last two decades could do with a bit of brightening up.

(more…)

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TV Smith

This Saturday sees the return to these shores of TV Smith, co-founder of 70’s British punk legends The Adverts. The Adverts, who in their time shared stages with The Damned, The Jam and Generation X, were pioneers of a burgeoning late seventies British punk scene, and led the way with anthems like “Bored Teenagers,” a classic whose lyrics, “We’re just bored teenagers. Looking for love, or should I say emotional rages” still hits me like a thump in the chest. Love it.

Also on the bill are Dublin punk stalwarts Paranoid Visions, still going strong after close to twenty nine years, and and relative newcomers Liz Is Evil. While both TV Smith and Paranoid Visions will be playing their own sets, there are plans afoot for collaboration wherein the two acts collide and a concoction of The Adverts with a very definite Dublin twist will take the stage. Look forward to that one!

The gig takes place in O’Byrnes / Ruta (formerly the Four Seasons) on the junction of Capel Street and North King Streeton Saturday at 8. CC is €10. Might see yizzers there!

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Via the excellent harkavagrant.

If you haven’t seen the love letters, maybe today isn’t the day to google them. Get into Dublin, and enjoy Bloomsday. Shame about the weather.

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…Dublin in the late 1950s. Incredible footage. Many thanks to YouTuber ojsor for uploading this amazing footage. It’s criminal that this has less than 300 views.

Snapshot in time of Dublin City Centre probably about 1958. Shows Trinity College, Nassau Street, Grafton Street, St Stephens Green, O’Connell Street Bridge and College Green finishing inside St Stephens Green.

I am, as we say in this part of the world, up to my eyeballs. Regular service will resume shortly.

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One of the things I’ll never forget from being taken down to see Pats in Inchicore as a youngster was the colour. We’re not just talking flags here, but smoke and fire. Of course, health and safety saw to it that flares were to be ultimately more or less eliminated from the domestic league, becoming a very uncommon and fine-heavy occurrence.

As part of their ten year celebrations, the Shed End Invincibles have produced this ‘Ten Years of Fire’ video.

Beyond Inchicore:

Shelbourne

SRFC Ultras

Bohemian FC

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Jay Carax will be in Manchester for the next two months but he’s hoping to post irregularly on Dublin and Irish related topics.

I don’t need to write much about the historical significance of  The Battle of Cable Street or the special place it has in the hearts in many in the Jewish community and socialist, anti-fascist movement in England. This year is the 75th anniversary and there are already many plans to mark the occassion.

It is a documented fact that thousands of Irish, mainly dockers, from Wapping and other areas, helped to defend the East End and stop the British Union of Fascists (BUF) from marching through. One of my favourite ever quotes comes from William J. Fishman (b. 1921) who wrote that “I was moved to tears to see bearded Jews and Irish Catholic dockers standing up to stop Mosley. I shall never forget that as long as I live, how working-class people could get together to oppose the evil of racism.”

Here, for (the first time ever online?) are original leaflets printed in the run up of October 4 calling on people to join the anti-fascist march. (Note: I see the second one is online but I don’t think the other two are)

Leaflet from the 'Jewish People's Council Against Fascism and Anti-Semtism' calling on people sign a petition to ban the march, October 1936. Scanned in by Jay Carax.

Leaflet from the 'Jewish People's Council Against Fascism and Anti-Semtism' thanking the 100,000 people who signed the petition, October 1936. Scanned in by Jay Carax.

Leaflet from the 'East London Assocation' calling on people to stop the fascist march, October 1936. Scanned in by Jay Carax

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My thanks to da’bruder who has a passion for old Dublin songs and songwriters and forwarded on this excellent number from Sean Tyrrell, The Black Hole. It’s a look at a previous economic collapse, or, as some people know it: the 1980’s.

Emigration, Geldoff, wine bars and a down-and-out Dublin. Give it a listen. This was recorded in Mother Redcaps. Powerful stuff from the past, as relevant as ever.

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Blogland is a small place. Dublin Blogland is even smaller. One of our favourite blogs has always been Dublin Opinion, with its mix of culture, history, politics and music it’s up a similar street and was one of the sites that inspired us to hit the ‘Register’ button on WordPress in the first place and give it a go ourselves.

Conor McCabe from Dublin Opinion has a new book hitting the shelves this weekend, entitled ‘Sins Of The Father’. It’s a look at the car crash that is the Irish economic collapse. If you follow that blog you’ve no doubt seen some of Conor’s posts on the economic situation which make you move the chair back a bit from the computer and just go ‘fucking hell’. His use of social and historical sources well beyond the confines of many economists areas of research has always offered unique insight on the collapse.

It’s been published by The History Press, who have been on a roll as of late in my opinion with some excellent works like Maurice Curtis’ look at militant catholicism in Ireland and Pat Poland’s history of the Cork fire service. I’ve always enjoyed Conor’s historical research, particularly around Irish labour and working class history, and think historians always bring a unique approach to all studies of the present.

I don’t expect to find ‘sure we are where we are’ in its conclusion, to say the least.

These are the questions set by this book. It will look at the development of the Irish economy over the past eight decades, and will argue that the 2008 financial crisis, up to and including the IMF bailout of 2010 and the subsequent change of government, cannot be explained simply by the moral failings of those in banking or property development alone. The problems are deeper, more intricate, and more dangerous if we remain unaware of them, but also potentially avoidable in the future if we break the cycle.

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