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The UCD Ball fallout continues.
Posted in Uncategorized on March 30, 2011| Leave a Comment »
UCD Ball: The Kids Don’t Like It.
Posted in Uncategorized on March 29, 2011| 4 Comments »
The UCD Ball out in Belfield actually looks half decent to me. Firstly, the Saw Doctors aren’t playing it. Secondly, a lot of good bands are.
A friend in UCD (Hi Rory) pointed me towards the Facebook event page for the Ball, where the hate can hardly be contained. In fact, it appears to be loike, a total disaster.
“I’ve seen Charlie Sheen put a better line up his nose.”
“I’d prefer to see a lineup of the ‘ents crew’ in front of a firing squad”
(my personal favourite comment is this one below)
“FUCK THE UCD BALL! BACBAR HAS IT ALL!!!!!!!
SINCE THE UCD BALL IS SO SHIT, COME TO THURSBRAY BACBAR ON THURSDAY APRIL 21ST!!! WE’RE GOING TO HAVE A WHOPPER RAVE AND HUNDREDS OF FREE BEER BONGS AND GLOWSTICKS FOR ALL!!!”
“It would be class if your deaf I suppose…”
“Is there an office where the ents crew hang out? If so we should go and kick the shit outta em!”
There are literally dozens of comments from students giving out about the line-up. It goes on and on and on and on like this. What kind of bands do students want to see at these things? You can please some of the people some of the time…..
Have a look over here.
The Icon Factory- Using the backlanes of Temple Bar as art space.
Posted in Uncategorized on March 29, 2011| 3 Comments »
-More images like these from The Icon Factory.
Back in September, I took a stroll down Bedford Lane and found The Dubliners and the Ringsend Cowboy among others hiding there. Since then, I’ve often strolled down the lane and found gems. It’s the work of The Icon Factory, an artists collective based as Aston Place.
Writers, poets, musicians and more besides feature in the backlanes of Temple Bar. I swung down to the writers wall with a tour last week and tourists loved it, but I think many Dubliners will too. It’s great to see the backlanes of the city centre availed of for this purpose.
The Celtic Tiger turned out to be an impotent pussy so now its time for Gaelic Lions to roar, to roam the midland boglands and puke splattered sidewalks of Temple Bar. We will honor you if we love you and mock those whom we disrespect
Prototype Extravaganza from Designing Dublin (Tomorrow, 30/3/11)
Posted in Uncategorized on March 29, 2011| 1 Comment »
Designing Dublin are putting on a day of events tomorrow to give people a better idea what their project looking at the Markets area is all about. Details are above, and there is a handy map over here.
I sat down with Designing Dublin in their workspace (idea aplenty!) back in February (week 4 podcast) to discuss the city, working on its streets and caring for its history.
They’ve been carrying out interviews with people who live and work in the Markets area too:
Things I Intend To Do This Week.
Posted in Uncategorized on March 29, 2011| 7 Comments »
It’s technically Tuesday even though I haven’t gone to bed yet, I’m getting slow with these.
Firstly, I welcome the Bohemian FC faithful across the Liffey this Friday. An incredible amount of traffic to this site comes from League of Ireland forums of all sorts, I think many League of Ireland fans in Dublin feel passionate about the city which hosts our respective clubs. Pats and Bohs is always a great encounter, the best goal I ever saw in the flesh was scored at an encounter between our sides in Dalymount Park.
With me in the mainstand and Ci the shed, a my side/your side article has to be written. I hope I’m bragging in it, but you never know. To any Pats players who find themselves reading this: Ask not what the southside can do for you….
I’m hoping to get into town with my crap camera and do something I’ve been meaning to for months: photograph my favourite Dublin shopfronts, along with some that are sadly rotten away. The fonts, the colours and all the rest make some of these integral parts of the streets of the capital.
On Sunday I dropped into Against The Grain with a friend to do a ‘wildcard selection’ as I call it. The pub over three glasses of foreign beer for €6, nice samples of stuff you wouldn’t normally try. For the second time, I took my chances and allowed the barstaff to pick three. Some day soon, I will find the best beer in the world by chance.
Friday sees another protest at Parkgate Street in relation to the case of Gerald McDonnell, the 63-year-old Dublin Port worker up in court over the ‘floating picket’ that formed part of that 8 month dispute in 2009, has been adjourned until April 1st. Supporters are asked to assemble outside the Courts of Justice (funny name) from 10am.
For 7 weeks, there are a series of free and open public discussions up at Exchange in Temple Bar, hosted by Knowledge Exchange. A friend made last weeks and her Facebook commentary suggests it was more than worthwhile. The first three lectures are looking at ‘internet activism’, the rise of which is something I’m fascinated watching unfold. The talks take place on Sundays.
The brother says (if you get that you’re in) that Myles Day will be excellent. Why wouldn’t it be? I’m hoping to drop into The Palace Bar on Friday with my ma to raise a drink to Flann O’Brien and hopefully hear a reading or two. Come meet dfallon’s mother!
Over the course of the week, I intend to walk the dog a bit more. You should too, providing you have one. The weather demands it.
A Time Before Ryanair.
Posted in Uncategorized on March 27, 2011| Leave a Comment »
I normally stick up the poster for the monthly Flea Market up at Newmarket, it falls on the last Sunday of the month. For some reason I forgot to do so this month.
In the past, of all the mad finds, I picked up a copy of the late 1940s far-right Aiséirghe newspaper via this market before. Today I picked up this 1960 Aer Lingus carrier bag, to come home and find one sold on eBay recently for three times what I picked it up for.
I’ve been to car boot sales and flea markets in every corner of the city, I might try to do a Sunday session of them around Dublin some week and do a write-up. If its mad old fascist newspapers or obscure pieces of Aer Lingus memorabilia you’re after, Newmarket is your only man.
“A last minute miracle, is all I can hope for”
Posted in Uncategorized on March 26, 2011| 2 Comments »
The last time I posted Last Minute Miracle by The Shirelles, it was to celebrate the great Dave Mulcahy scoring a last-minute goal for Saint Patrick’s away to Bohs and sending the place into hysterics.
How fitting it should be upon Dave’s 100th game for the club he does it again. 89 minutes. Scarves go up. The crowd goes wild. It’s all the more remarkable when you consider with a half hour to go we were trailing Dundalk by two goals to nil.
Once again, the Shed End Invincibles deserve praise for bringing the Richmond Roar back to Inchicore.
Their musical chairs journey around the stadium seems to have come to an end, they’ve been in every corner of this stadium but seem to have found a natural home. Watching the game from the Camac, they were louder from there than they normally would seem right next to us in the ‘new stand’. If they remain where they currently are, and Bohs fans bring their voices next week, it will be a great advertisement for the League.
One of the most bizarre moments I can recall in the League comes soon after kickoff, with both the travelling Dundalk fans and the Shed End Invincibles singing ‘Just Can’t Get Enough’, the Depeche Mode classic introduced to the football stands and terraces of Europe by the Green Brigade of Glasgow. They’re not in sync, at all, and the sing-off continues for a few minutes with neither side willing to concede the song for the night.
They are temporarily silenced on 17 and 49 minutes when Pats hate figure and one time European hero Mark Quigley scores. Two goals, and two beautiful goals to boot- the worst kind for a hate figure to score really. The second, a top class overhead strike, has the home faithful thinking we’re on course for a third defeat in a row. A disaster in other words.
What followed on the pitch was a spectacle. In fact, coming from 2 nil down to win by a goal is pretty ironic considering only two weeks ago we were cruising at that same scoreline against Bray before losing.
It would be wrong to conclude any report from the night without tipping the hat to the PA woman. Gone are the Cheryl Cole and Lady GaGa tracks, replaced by The Selector and The Clash. Maybe next week, for Mulcahy, we’ll stick on Last Minute Miracle.
Is this the best shutter in Dublin?
Posted in Uncategorized on March 25, 2011| 4 Comments »
I’m normally in town early enough in the day, and enjoy popping into R.A.G.E on Fade Street for a quick look. They’ve taken over the old Road Records and stayed very true to the spirit of that Dublin favourite, with vinyl taking pride of place and classic sounds playing all day. Unusually, they also stock classic video games for the kind of consoles you have under your bed.
I’d heard about the shutter, but you can hardly shout in ‘CLOSE YER SHOP SO I CAN HAVE A LOOK AT THE SHUTTERS!’ in fairness.
RAGE are on Facebook, over here.
Drawing with Don Conroy.
Posted in Uncategorized on March 25, 2011| 6 Comments »
Don Conroy in The Bernard Shaw.
It could go either way really, couldn’t it?
Well, it went swimmingly. A crowd of several hundred (PACKED!) twenty-somethings gathered out the back of a pub to listen to Don tell stories, and more importantly they gathered to watch the man draw owls.
Here is some audio from the event, Don discussing a visit from the postman in his childhood. He was loving the banter with the crowd, and I was surprised by the amount of random faces I encountered there, people I’ve never spotted in the pub before, including people from my childhood. The man is loved.
Pardon my mates and the general crowd:
Having drawn a few owls and told a few stories, Don was happy to sign heaps of autographs and pose for plenty of photographs.
Well done Don, the most successful artist in The Bernard Shaw yet 😉
Take Him Down From The Mast.
Posted in Uncategorized on March 23, 2011| 5 Comments »
Yesterday Gardaí and the Dublin Fire Brigade were called to the headquarters of RTE where a man had scaled the mast with a number of protest banners. Sadly for him, he did it late at night when the area was in darkness and none of the news reports on the event seem to make mention to what his protest was in relation to. It seems from the Tweet Machine that his protest was about Ryanair. Perhaps there is a charge for protesting at O’Leary’s HQ.
The man came down and was arrested by Gardaí.
I rooted out this Indo report from June 14 1984, when a number of young republicans took to the mast in protest at RTE’s censorship of republican voices. Of course, RTE today is a completely impartial news source and I’m known to be a huge fan.
Dublin City Graffiti.
Posted in Uncategorized on March 22, 2011| 3 Comments »
This is a great new venture, DublinCityGraffiti.com
It’s great to see stuff around the city worked into subcategories such as paste-ups, murals, stickers and stencils, with special sections for the ‘repeat offenders’.
I snapped the picture at the top of this piece months and months back on a sunny morning walking to work. Since then, the piece is long removed. It’s nice to see a site documenting what goes up on the walls of the capital. Some of it is good, some of it is not so good, some of is clever, some of it is not so clever. Knowing absolutely nothing about graffiti beyond the right way to hold a spraycan, I always see myself as the random punter someone was trying to get something across to.
It’s a great way to kill half an hour, give it a look.
Light House Cinema In Trouble?
Posted in Uncategorized on March 22, 2011| 5 Comments »
There is a pretty worrying read in The Irish Times today regarding the future of the Light House Cinema in Smithfield.
THE BOARD of Dublin’s Light House cinema will meet today to discuss its future ahead of a High Court hearing of a petition to wind up the company.
John Flynn, the cinema’s landlord, has issued a wind-up petition against Light House Cinema Exhibition and Distribution Company Limited, following a dispute about the rent on the Smithfield premises. The petition will be heard on Monday.
The directors of the cinema have been in negotiations with Mr Flynn and his family in relation to the rent charged on the property, which houses four cinema screens in a basement building in Smithfield Market. It is understood the landlord doubled the annual rent from €100,000 to €200,000 last May. The directors have withheld a portion of the rent charged.
You can read the report here.
My visits to the Light House were few and far between, mainly owing to its location, but I did love it when I visited. At 4 screens it is, much like the IFI in Temple Bar, catered towards art house cinema and foreign film screenings that might not get a look-in at the likes of Cineworld.
It’s a sign of the times of course, and if one walks through Smithfield you can’t help but notice the amount of empty retail units in the area that never really took off in the way you’d suspect was expected.
It will be a great loss to cinema goers in Dublin if it is lost, as The Cobblestone is undoubtedly the best spot in the city for pre-cinema pints.















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