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Archive for 2011

“FG Girl shows how to use Twitter.”
FG Girl. She doesn’t have a name.

“Digital revolution.”
Yeah, it’s just like Egypt.

Shameless plug:We have a page on the tweet machine.

Update: It gets worse.

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Word filtering through on Boards.ie that this old building which used to house Murphys Prams has been knocked down sometime during the last few days.

(c) Gabri Le Cabri, 2006

Anyone have any pictures of what it looks like now? Anyone know why they knocked it?

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Next Saturday, Murray's Bar, O'Connell Street

Coinciding with the implosion of Fianna Fáil and the inevitable trundling in of our new Fianna Gael overlords is a great weekend of music in Murray’s Bar on O’Connell Street. It looks set to be a busy weekend for us here at CHTM! too, with our involvement in both gigs. JayCarax and DFallon are spinning the decks on Friday night at the ever excellent Punky Reggae Party while I’ll be hitting the stage at some point on the Saturday night at the above gig; a thumping line-up containing Dublin crust legends Easpa Measa, Droppin’ Bombs and newbies Dirge. Following the bands will be Punky Reggae DJs until 2.30 AM. The gig is a joint fundraiser for the IPSC, AFA and the St. Pauli Supporters Club Dublin. 
————————————–
Doors @ 9pm, first band @ 10pm.
Entrance – €8 waged / €5 unwaged.

Sounds of Resistance on Facebook
Event Page

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More bad news.

Trout Records, the great little record stall in the middle of George’s Street Arcade, is set to close at the end of the month.

I’ve bought and sold many CDs and DVDs down through the years. Best wishes to Mac. and co in any future endeavors.

(c) Andrew Lieske

(c) Andrew Lieske

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A local pub for a local club, Glenville F.C

This is Saint Patrick’s Athletic territory. Anyone who follows the League around here tends to head for Inchicore, and the closest club. Even Rovers arriving in West Dublin didn’t impact on our support here in any real way.

Imagine my surprise then the first time I spotted a Bohs scarf behind the bar in the local.

Well, half a Bohs scarf. It’s half them, half Glenville. They’re the local F.C, and the scarf remembers an FAI Cup tie that nobody associated with them will likely ever forget. It didn’t end in glory, but just getting there was a great day for the community. Fittingly enough, it was played in Richmond Park.

“Someone should bring in a Pats scarf for the wall…..” starts the conversation. The election follows. You overhear others having very similar discussions. Paddy Power is right next door and it’s not horses they’re all watching this week, but gombeens and hopefuls, ‘also rans’ and likely bets.

It’s quiet enough. It’s a Sunday night granted, but I’ve been here on Sunday nights before. Barcelona and Bilbao is coming to an end on the television, a couple of punters half following the encounter.

The downstairs of the Silver Granite has a great little snug, but like the best of them it’s frequently full and can fill up early. We take up two seats just inside the door, and order a pint. The pint here has always been excellent. One becomes four. Four almost becomes five. Best leave it at one if anyone asks….

It’s a shame I don’t visit this place more, it is afterall ‘the local’. Spending most of my free time in the city centre, it’s just a matter of location. My location more than the pubs.

With that one, magically refilling pint out of the way, we’re off. There’s all the normal nods and quick chats that come with a visit to the local. It might not have the Korean pop music of The Hop House, where I more frequently head for, but it is on my doorstep.

Clean, nice barstaff, a very good pint. Like most locals, it’s grand.

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Have you played the Fine Gael ‘game’? Super Mario it ain’t. You get to throw little Fine Gael logos (spacebar) at other party figureheads and…..kill them. Look, Enda just killed Lenihan, and he’s about to kill Joan Burton with a lethal Fine Gael logo.

This whole election has been painful, with regards Fine Gael ‘viral’ campaigning. Sack someone.

Head over here to be amazed.

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I’ve been keeping all election literature pushed through my door to send it on to the Irish Election Literature Blog, which I think is a great resource. When I found this one earlier on however, I was pretty tempted to rip it to shreds.

Confused? Have a look over at politico.ie here.

Colm McGrath: Colm McGrath had left Fianna Fáil by the time of the party’s inquiry in 2000, and did not participate. Frank Dunlop told the Tribunal he paid Colm McGrath £1,000 in connection with the Ballycullen rezoning in 1992, as well as other payments. Colm McGrath denied receiving the Ballycullen payment, and said other payments were political donations. Christopher Jones told the Tribunal he gave Colm McGrath £1,700 at fundraising functions between 1992 and 1999. Colm McGrath said he had no detailed records of these, but said he had received some support from Christopher Jones.

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This is a great plaque I’ve not spotted before, on the Quaker Meeting House on Eustace Street. It’s right next to the IFI Cinema. Being a member of the IFI, and always using Eustace Street as opposed to passing through the heart of Temple Bar, I’m surprised I’ve overlooked it.

It is well known that on November 9 1791 the Dublin Society of United Irishmen was formed at the Eagle Tavern, which stood at this site. By no means the prettiest plaque in the city (I think one of the most visually pleasing is one we featured recently to Robert Noonan), it’s an important one none the less.

J.T Gilbert wrote of The Eagle in his A History of the City of Dublin that:

The society called ‘the Whigs of the Capital’, composed of public-spirited citizens of Dublin, held at the Eagle, early in 1791, their political dinners, attended by the Lord Mayor, the Duke of Leinster, Lord Charlemont, Lord Henry Fitzgerald, Grattan, Curran, Ponsonby, and several other patriotic characters.

Back on Culture Night we had a look inside the Meeting House today. Eustace Street remains one of my favourite little streets in the capital.

Seal of the United Irishmen movement.

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We’re on the telly!

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Dev’s residence at the time of the Rising- 34 Munster Street

Day dreaming about winning the lotto and buying a house over the weekend, I came across the above on Daft (considering I have about as much a chance of winning the lotto as buying a house it was about as far fetched as daydreams get.) The house above is 34 Munster Street, Phibsoboro; Dev’s place of residence at the time of the Rising, and yours for just €290, 000. Phibsboro was a hotbed of activity around that period, with Dev, Harry Boland, Dick McKee, 15 year old Fianna member Seán Healy and 18 year old James Kelly amongst it’s residents involved in the fighting during Easter Week. Whilst Dev’s political legacy is “somewhat complicated,” his influence on Irish history is still felt today. If walls could talk…

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Watch this from Labour:

Then watch this:

They’re Nobama.

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… there’s a new Indo in town and he goes by the name of John Keigher.

(c) Jay Carax

We spotted the above poster in a small, upstairs internet cafe at the bottom of Grafton Street last Friday afternoon while myself and DFallon were postering and flyering around town for this weekend’s Punky Reggae Party gig (see below).

Not only is it amazing but it’s the ONLY leaflet of his we saw during our 3 hour traipse around the whole of the city centre. Is he only focusing on Dublin South East Internet cafes? Only 2nd floor shops on Grafton Street? Does anyone know?!?

And yes, he’s real.

(c) Jay Carax

(c) Jay Carax

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