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Archive for the ‘Miscellaneous’ Category

Victory for the punter!

Some of you might remember this pic, first posted on the site in June 2010.

Spotted in the window of The Alamo, Temple Bar.

Bargain.

Well, I passed The Alamo earlier on today. Check this out:

We won’t claim all the credit 😉

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Breaking Beer News: Meet the Brewer this Friday will be a very special celebration of all things ‘Blue Moon’. Yes, free tastings and beer advice from 7pm. Come in regardless of the lunar cycle.

 

Stall down to Against The Grain on Wexford Street on Friday evening for some free tastings of Blue Moon. We’ve heard the food is great there too.

 

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Remember this? A concerted effort by those in Leinster House to get “the youth” out to vote by making it cool ala New Labours Cool Brittania across the water a few years back. The criticism was quiet but produced the following video, summed up as “a satirical take on the mind-numbingly vapid rock the vote campaign in Ireland.” The legacy left behind by that campaign is that a large number of those it targetted have been forced to flee Ireland for shores new once again. It started slowly for me, but that trickle has become a flood and I’m hearing of someone else emigrating every other day now. In the video below, some of the faces may have changed, (thankfully McDowell has disappeared back to Hades or wherever he came from) but the sentiment remains the same.

Oh, and to read another cringe-worthy piece of journalism from Ruth Gilligan where she descries the disappearence of “convoys of Volkswagen Polos up to UCD, [with] collars up and speakers up even higher, blaring Kanye for all to hear,” go here. 

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Strand Street Great, Dublin 1.

Stumbled across this recently.

As for what it’s all about, re-dress.ie is over here.

WHO

Re-dress was set up in 2008 by
Rosie O Reilly, Kellie Dalton and Kate Nolan.

WHAT

The Re-dress Better Fashion Initiative is an organisation dedicated to promoting better fashion practice.

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Ever so slightly unsettling this, not least because of the background music, Dublin Dilettante from the ever deadly Circumlimina blog gives us a look at what we might expect from a decade of “EU/IMF rule under Labour, Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil (in whatever permutation.)” Scary to say the least!

“And remember, we’re all in this together.”

Cheers to Barra for the heads up.

The Republic of IMF, from thejournal.ie

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"The Liberator"

This is a great video from Albert Hooi showing the hard work involved in setting up the recent They Are Us exhibition from Damien Dempsey and Maser at Smithfield. It shows the completion of the excellent James Connolly piece, my favourite artistic take on Connolly since Harry Kernoff’s great 1935 effort.

Excellent stuff. Well done to all involved.

A few images and a brief report from the launch night of the exhibition can be found over here.

Getting there at 5.15 or so, we were well ahead of time and ended up carrying sambos up the stairs with a woman who told us “you’s will get your reward in the next life lads”.

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Murmurs on the docks

[murmur] is a documentary oral history project that records stories and memories told about specific geographic locations. We collect and make accessible people’s personal histories and anecdotes about the places in their neighborhoods that are important to them.

Murmur Dublin, another fantastic website/idea, in similar vein to the Story Map website which we covered earlier. You can listen to all the stories online.

Explore [murmur] Dublin Docklands:

  1. Go for a walk: bring your mobile phone, and head for the green ears on the map.
  2. Find the green ear, and call the number on it.
  3. Enter the code on the sign to hear people’s stories about the place where you’re standing.

Murmour Dublin

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DAA Parody Video

Some lols here to brighten up your wet, Tuesday morning. Props to Baz.

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A Robert Ballagh piece in The Shebeen, Hamburg

A strange week for CHTM! Two of us were in Hamburg but not at the same time, both to see St. Pauli play. The one who planned months in advance (ie. me) ended up having no game to go to as it was called off due to an unplayable pitch, and the one who got his tickets on the off chance of us meeting someone nice enough to part way with a couple six days before their game (ie. DFallon) did.  Thats the way it goes I guess, but both of us were welcomed with open arms into a pub by the name of Shebeen, not far from the Millerntor Stadium where St. Pauli ply their trade. Enough to have us already planning our next trip over.

The outstanding thing I found about the Shebeen (apart from the fact that there’s a hairdressers on the way to the jacks) was the above Robert Ballagh piece on the wall, depicting a rally in Dublin in support of the Hungerstrikers. It’s rare enough to see one of these in Dublin so imagine my surprise when I saw it taking pride of place here…

 

 

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Story Map

Storymap presents a charming vision of Dublin through its stories and storytellers.

Fantastic idea. Storymap interviews various Dubliners all over the city, each of whom tells their own little story whether historical or personal.

Add them on Facebook here and check them out on Youtube here.

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Right, don’t get me wrong, I’m not slagging either of these blokes- my family are gifted with foreheads you could play handball off; but I just spotted this on the back of a paper that shall remain nameless (a red top hated by the red half of Liverpool, I didn’t buy it, my housemate did.)

Heads up lads, and no shame

They really are leaving themselves open for no end of slagging next season, not to mention the fact that Cretaro has buggered back off to Sligo and Ian Ryan has been with Shels for just over a year now!

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Unless you’re a newcomer to CHTM, you’ll know that on one Sunday a month the three of us, in the company of a small group of friends head out on a pub crawl, with pubs carefully selected by one member of our troop but not revealed until we’re standing outside the door. Five pubs with a bit of history thrown in, what better way to spend a Sunday afternoon.

Unbeknownst to ourselves, we hit a landmark on January’s crawl and didn’t celebrate it in style. We’ve been wondering how long it would take us to reach the hundred pubs mark on CHTM! and we did it here, and in less than a year- with three of our number drinking bottles of Lech and another a Lithuanian beer called Svyturys in O’Byrnes Bar, on the corner of Capel St. and Bolton St. Don’t get me wrong, we found it to be a lovely place; any pub with an open fire gets our vote of confidence pretty much straight away. It was just the fact that we thought our hundredth pub would be a great pint of Guinness in an institution like Mulligans or the Lord Edward; our fault really, covering them in the first couple of pub crawls.

O'Byrnes Bar, taken from the Tale of Ale blog

O’Byrnes though- a lovely pub with sound staff and a great taste in decor- the walls are bedecked with some classic 7″ records alongside old Hot Press covers and obligatory pictures of the Dubliners, Thin Lizzy and the likes.  We neglected to take the comfy looking couches inside the door in favour of the seats down the back beside the (unfortunately dying) fire. This place has been known as a “corner of death,” in that any business opened here in recent years rarely lasts too long, but the current owners have done a fine job in bringing something to the place, offering a range of Irish craft beers and ales which come highly recommended from the excellent Tale of Ale blog. Great tunes filtered in over the stereo too, a mix of classic and Irish rock. As nice as it was, its a pub I’d like to return to on a busy night to really see what its like. As with all of the pubs on this crawl, there was no smoking area. Lucky we only had the one smoker with us so!

Bodkins, by the ever brilliant Infomatique, from Flickr

And so, we ventured across the road to Bodkins. Probably our first “student bar” to visit on a pub crawl, this was more a space filler between bars one and three than one I’d normally pick. Lets call it a “cultural experiment.” We were joined here by a pub crawl newbie and happily started into the Guinness. €4 a pint, not bad for the city centre, but certainly not the best pint of Guinness we have tasted on our rounds; a bit of an aftertaste and it lost it’s head very quickly. They do a €5 bar menu and thats probably the cause of that. They also have free wifi and do a “laptop loan” (“unless you’re an asshole” as per their site, which is fair enough.) There’s not many places left in the city centre with pool tables, but this being the closest DIT Bolton Street has to a student bar, you can see why they’re there, alongside a signed Man. Utd. jersey in memory of a young lad that passed away, a jukebox and plenty of televisions showing the footie.  It has drink deals (three bottles of Sol for a tenner and that kind of thing, ) but in complete opposite from our next stop, its certainly no local.

(more…)

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