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Archive for 2010

God, this fanzine is confusing. Confusing, yet laugh out loud funny on several ocasions.

Should appeal to the Bohs faithful. Loaned to us by Kevin Brannigan and the property of Neil Mulvey, these are sitting in a brown envelope for a while now waiting to go back across the liffey. Must meet that Brannigan for a pint and get them back to their rightful owner.

Previous fanzines posted on Come Here To Me:

Only Fools and Horses (Bohemian F.C)
Hoops Upside Your Head (Shamrock Rovers)
Osam Is Doubtful (Saint Patrick’s Athletic)
A Rough Guide To Dalymount Park 1993

As ever, fullscreen it

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Haven’t seen this one for a while, but it appeared on someones Facebook the other day. Such a strange mix of mates, comrades and Ryan Bloody Tubridy, but it always rises a giggle. Being the only non- Dub on the blog, I probably shouldn’t be spreading a video taking the piss out of  my bretheren beyond the pale but, ah well, self- depreciating humour is sometimes the best.

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I’m really enjoying the TG4 Seachtar na Cásca efforts. One by one, an hour will be given to examine the men who signed the 1916 proclamation. So far we’ve seen Thomas Clarke, James Connolly and Joseph Plunkett. Plunkett was a man I knew very little about, and while I was very familiar with the other two men the manner in which their stories were presented made for fascinating viewing. Fintan Lane, Diarmaid Ferriter and other historians lend a great hand to the programme, and TG4 continue to use the perfect bilingual approach. Present the show in Irish, and have the experts speak in the language of their own work, be it Irish or English.

Tonight sees Thomas MacDonagh examined. He is, after Connolly, the most interesting of the seven men to me. His role in the foundation of the ASTI Union is so often forgotten, and he moved throughout the Irish literary scene too, immortalised in the beautiful Francis Ledwidge poem ‘Lament for Thomas MacDonagh’ from which this post takes its title. He was appointed a lecturer at UCD in 1911, and in 1914 was central to the foundation of The Irish Theatre in Hardwicke Street.

His translation of The Yellow Bittern remains among my favourite poems.

” The yellow bittern that never broke out
In a drinking bout, might as well have drunk;
His bones are thrown on a naked stone
Where he lived alone like a hermit monk.
O yellow bittern! I pity your lot,
Though they say that a sot like myself is curst —
I was sober a while, but I’ll drink and be wise
For I fear I should die in the end of thirst…..”

The programme will air tonight at 9.30.

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Our friend Orla over at Jacolette found this fantastic photo in a skip on Oxmantown Road. She’s trying to figure out whether it was taken in Dublin and if so, where. Click on the photo below to view the full post.

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Pardon my shadow.

just watched Joe Duffy deliver an amazing story on James connolly for irelands greatest..he has my vote.! If your in ire vote..no 1513717103

-Nicky Byrne from Westlife over on Twitter. With him on board, surely it’s a done deal!

To vote for Connolly text Great3 to 53125.

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Stuck to the noticeboard of Trivia Nightclub (R.I.P Trivia, R.I.P)

You A__ Beautiful, great shopfront just off Grafton Street

Factually correct.

‘Dare To Be Different’.

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The good lads from the Alphabet Set have brightened up the Dublin Friday night skyline with ‘Roots Pon De Corner‘, a new night focusing on the best of “vintage roots, revival, rubadub & steppers” based in The Dark Horse Inn beside Tara St. DART station.

Brigadier JC (Roots Factory, Limerick), Tuathal & t-woc (Alphabet Set, Dublin) are the vinyl selectors on hand. Doors open at 8pm and the music winds down at 12:30am, which gives you ample time to head to that birthday/office/emigration party that you have to show your face at.

It’s free admission (you can’t argue with that) and pints are at a very reasonable €4.

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The folks over at the Saint Patrick’s Athletic site have been excellent for getting archive clips onto YouTube, from both historical victories and defeats. It’s interesting to look at how the game has changed in Ireland, and indeed everything from stadiums to supporters flags and banners have come on in leaps and bounds.

This RTE 1993 report on the return to Richmond Park is excellent.

“..always a warm welcome from one of the friendliest clubs in the League.”

1996 FAI Cup Final footage from a clash with Shelbourne, from Lansdowne Road. Will we be back there this year?

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Against The Wall.

This weekend sees the launch of ‘Against The Wall’, a book on the work of artists both local and international that has turned the infamous wall erected by the Israeli state into a blank art canvas to work from. Sometimes humour shines through, more often anger. Among the graffiti artists to add to the wall one finds the likes of household name Banksy and Ron English.

Before the book launch there will be accompanying events where street art inspired by the book will be painted at The Bernard Shaw pub. This will take place on Friday October 15 from 3pm.

Following this event, the book will be launched at Connolly Books, East Essex Street at 6.30pm.

More information is available from the Irish Palestine Solidarity Campaign over here.

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Go, fetch to me a pint o’ wine,
And fill it in a silver tassie,
That I may drink before I go.
A service to my bonie lassie

From that song came the footballer, Harry Heegan, who won the cup and went to war, and the entire narrative of The Silver Tassie….Sean had spoken with great excitement and urgency of his treatment of the second act in the war zone on The Western Front.
Eileen O’ Casey from ‘Sean’

The 1920s in Britain produced plenty of literature, plays and drama inspired by the ‘Great War’. The majority of this of course was almost nostalgic, reflecting the soldiers of the empire as a unified organisation of heroes. It was also for the most part the product of men who had been nowhere near the war, and C. Desmond Greaves remarked in his excellent study of the politics of Sean O’ Casey that in such works “..officers and gentlemen emitted the cosy sentiments of the cricket field”.

The cosy repackaging of the war was a long way removed from the view held by many in the labour movement of course. James Connolly had written in the midst of the war that “the carnival of murder on the continent will be remembered as a nightmare in the future”, a view no doubt shared by O’ Casey. In The Silver Tassie, O’ Casey’s excellent anti-war play, we see a rejection of the more comfortable version of events. Like Connolly before him, O’ Casey saw the war as nothing but the slaughter of working class men.

The Abbey rejection of The Silver Tassie is well documented. It was perhaps unsurprising, owing to the response to The Plough and the Stars in 1926, and the new direction of O’ Casey’s work. Yeats famously wrote to O’ Casey that “…you are not interested in the Great War; you never stood on its battlefields, never walked in its hospitals, and so write out of your opinions.” Yet O’ Casey had seen the horror of the war firsthand. While at St. Vincent’s Hospital he had been in the presence of men completely destroyed by the war. His own brothers had been in the British army, and like any working class Dubliner O’ Casey had seen men walking around the city as shadows of their former selves. The hurt caused to O’ Casey by the rejection of the play was perhaps clearest when he refused to meet Lady Gregory in London, despite her writing of her desires to see the play there.

Men of the 10th (Irish) Division.

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Sunday Morning Coming Down.

There is something about town at 6am on a Sunday morning. Traffic lights change with nobody to even notice, the taxi men have gone home for the most part and in that awkward three hours between the last Nitelink and the first commuter bus, even Westmoreland Street is quiet. You pass Supermacs, Abrakebabra and the sort and see workers cleaning up, but no activity beyond that. The maddest night of the week has passed for them, and unlike Londis on the corner their windows have made it through in one piece.

There is no real activity anywhere beyond McDonalds, where 6am appears a fine time to many Dubliners to grab breakfast. A bizarre mix of people await you inside, ranging from those who have finally given up the ghost on Saturday night and have made the decision to return home to those whose high-vis jackets suggest the working day is about to begin. Coffee flows freely, while the odd drunken youth demands a Coca Cola. Nothing works better with a Bacon Egg McMuffin, I imagine. It’s made fairly clear to punters that McDonalds does not a bus terminus make, and in the course of half an hour numerous people are moved along. I take the tip, grab a coffee and we’re off.

The base of the Daniel O’ Connell status resembles a public bin, but as such is just in keeping with the general vibe of the street behind him. You wouldn’t envy the street cleaners. Among the more unusual items discarded here, we find a swivel chair (where did that come from?), which is later spotted coming up the street with a merry youngster in the driving seat. Gardaí pass in groups of four or even five, but a lad on a swivel chair doesn’t seem too much of a threat to the peace.

We pass a father and son combination going from shop to shop to drop off the Sunday newspapers. The young lad is flying, Tribunes and Sunday Times left from shop to shop at record pace. His passion for the job at hand isn’t shared by many, and more than a few people on route to work can be heard to mutter “fucking hells…” and the like about the streetscape before them, in a rigged sheep competition kind of astonishment.

Catching the 7.05AM bus out-of-town, you can’t help but be surprised how many people are on the thing. So much for Sunday being a day of rest for workers, the vast majority of these people seem to be off to earn a living. A man who boards the bus on the quays is the ultimate ‘thing I don’t want to see on my way to work’ without a doubt, an idiot who proceeds to burst into song.

“WIMAX, ALL ACROSS THE NATION.
SOMETHING SOMETHING NEW SENSATION…”

This is followed by him telling everyone who will listen that his father from Tipperary “hates the blacks”, and him commenting on the amount of “gays” up by Georges Street. I didn’t have the heart to explain this one to him, and it seems to be rolling eyes all over the bus, at least from those who are awake. A Nokia alarm sound wakes one man who seems to have this to a second, and he’s awake and off the bus for work. When he gets the bus back to town, he’ll probably step out into an unrecognisable city from this morning, and WiMax man will likely still be in bed.

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A fascinating five part documentary on the history of Dublin, focusing on the city’s markets and the redevelopment of the city, that recently surfaced on Youtube.

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