But they did.
Foam Cafe, Strand Street, Dublin.
Looking for it, in fairness.
Thanks Karen O’Mahony
Update:
But they did.
Foam Cafe, Strand Street, Dublin.
Looking for it, in fairness.
Thanks Karen O’Mahony
Update:
Karl O’Dwyer writes:
Peter Higgs [above] will be giving a talk in NUIM on the 3rd of May, your readers might be interested in going.
We’ll just check if it collides with anything in our diary.
Collides.
Oh, suit yourselves.
He’s up for the ‘best job in the world’.
Comment moderator on Broadsheet.
A lifestyle photographer in Australia.
Heber Hanly writes:
I am writing to inform you that I have been shortlisted as part of the Best Jobs in the World competition. It is a competition run by the Australian tourism board to find people both locally and internationally to work in certain jobs. I am one of three Irish people selected in the shortlist.
The role I am attempting to fill is that of lifestyle photographer. If I get it I will essentially be doing is working as a photojournalist in Melbourne for 6 months. Now that I have been selected I have to begin promoting myself in local media. When I heard this I thought about contacting you guys as you directed a lot of traffic towards my Junior Spesh video (which I would like to really thank you for as it brightened my day).
Watch here: ‘Best Job in the World’ (Australia.com)
Graphic designer and best-dad-ever contender David LaFerriere has been drawing illustrations on his kids’ school lunch sandwich bags for the last five years.
He’s photographed 1,100 of them and you can explore the entire collection on his Flickr stream.
An investigation into the Irish media’s role in Ireland’s housing bubble by Canadian academic Dr Julien Mercille, above, of University College Dublin is out.
A synopsis of the article has been published on Social Europe Journal, in which Dr Mercille writes:
“It is not too difficult to identify a housing bubble in the making, based on simple indicators such as the P/E (price/earnings) ratio and the price-to-income ratio. This is what a few analysts did, such as The Economist magazine, which stated in 2002 that Ireland’s real estate market had been ‘displaying bubble-like symptoms in recent years’ and estimated that it was then overvalued by 42 per cent. However, the Irish media were almost without exception cheerleaders for the booming property market, only dampening their enthusiasm months after prices had started to decline in late 2007 and 2008.”
“One way to illustrate this claim is simply to count the number of references in the press to the notion of a ‘bubble’ in the housing market before and after the crash. The figure [below] shows this for the Irish Times, Ireland’s newspaper of record. It can be seen that before 2008-2009, there were comparatively few articles that even mentioned that the market might be in bubble territory. On average, the newspaper had 5.5 times more articles on the bubble per year in 2008–2011 than in 1996–2007. For the newspapers Irish Independent and Sunday Independent, which boast a high readership, it was even worse: they had on average 12.5 times more articles mentioning the bubble in 2008–2011 than in 1999–2007. And that doesn’t mean that such articles published before the crash warned of a bubble—very, very few did, and many only talked about it to attempt to reassure readers that in fact, it didn’t exist.”
“Some Irish Times articles’ titles give an idea of media coverage,” Dr Mercille adds:
‘Bricks and Mortar Unlikely to Lose Their Value’ (11 December 2002),
‘Prices to Rise as Equilibrium is Miles Away’ (18 March 2004),
‘House Prices “Set for Soft Landing”‘ (22 November 2005),
‘Property Market Unlikely to Collapse, Says Danske Chief’ (2 February 2006)
And
‘House Prices Rising at Triple Last Year’s Rate’ (29 June 2006).”
He continues:
“Another way to look at the performance of the Irish media before the crisis is to consider that between 2000 and 2007, the Irish Times published over 40,000 articles on economic topics – but only 78 were about the real estate bubble, or 0.2 per cent of the total. In other words, any article that might have been critical about the housing market was effectively lost in a sea of uncritical reporting. That’s a very poor record for one of the most important economic events in Ireland over the last decades.”
“Television displayed the same behaviour as the print press. During the boom, the state broadcaster, RTÉ, fed the national obsession with property by airing shows like House Hunters in the Sun, Showhouse, About the House and I’m an Adult, Get Me Out of Here. In particular, Prime Time, a leading current affairs programme, remained essentially silent on the dangers inherent in the rapid growth of the property market.”
“Between 2000 and 2007, it presented over 700 shows, but only 10, or about 1 per cent of the total, talked about the housing boom. Worse, the majority of these had guests arguing that there wasn’t any bubble. This is not surprising, as most of them were either affiliated with the property and financial industries or politicians from Ireland’s establishment parties (Fianna Fail, Fine Gael and Labour), which all had direct or indirect political or economic interests in sustaining the fiction that the Irish economy was booming, and would not stop booming. They were quickly brought back to their senses, but alas, too late.”
The full academic journal is available to purchase – at a knock-down-price! – here.
Previously: A Reason We’re In This Mess
Pic: UCD
H/T: Rob Kitchin
‘While preparing for his role as Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver, De Niro obtained a cab driver’s license, and when on break would pick up a cab and drive around New York for a couple of weeks’ – Wikipedia
Robert De Niro’s Taxicab License, 1975 (Retronaut)
(Hat tip: Whaddyanuts?)
Micheal Martin wishes Enda Kenny and Eamon Gilmore a happy birthday today – says “birthdays are about the only thing uniting both of you”.
— Justin McCarthy (@JustinTodayFM) April 24, 2013