Yearly Archives: 2016

bordnamona

That blummin’ ad.

Fixed.

Bog Boy writes:

I got fed up with Bord na Móna’s smarmy ‘Naturally Driven’ advertising blitz and wondered instead what it would be like if Ireland’s most environmentally destructive company could be a little more honest about its business of burning bogs and destroying ecosystems, rather than pretending to care about ‘the environment’?

This short parody video, voiced over by an angelic 11-year old, suggests they might change their slogan from ‘Naturally Driven’ to a more truthful: ‘Profit Driven….

FIGHT!

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With ONE free family ticket to see box office hit The Angry Birds Movie directed by Irishman Fergal Reilly (above) at any ODEON cinema plus an Angry Bird figurine signed by Fergal we asked:

Who is the best Irish film director currently working?

You answered in your tens.

But there could only be one winner and two runners up.

Winners

Rob: “My favourite Irish film director currently making movies is my friend Rory Dungan because his first movie is a Zombie movie, which isn’t finished being made, so he hasn’t had the chance to disappoint me yet.”

Garthicus: ‘My favourite Irish film director currently making movies is……………. because………… I genuinely don’t have an informed answer, but my 5 year old is Angry Birds crazy and would love this prize.. so I’ll just say Neil Jordan cause he was sound the time I met him when I was an extra on Michael Collins.

Daisy Chainsaw: “My favourite Irish film director currently making movies is Paul O’Brien because Staid is a beautiful film.”

Rob wins the family passes and a signed figurine. Paul and Daisy go home with a signed figurine and may have to download the movie illegally will have pay like regular folk at Odeon cinemas nationwide..

Bubblin’ under>

JimmytheHead: “My favourite Irish film director currently making movies is not this geezer because jaunty scarf.”

badatmemes: “My favourite Irish film director currently making movies is Mattress Mick because nothing really mattress. Anyone can see. Nothing really matress to me.’

Odeon Cinemas

Yesterday: Win Fergals Bird

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A logo that doesn’t look like Bank of ireland’s?

This afternoon.

Leinster House, Kildare Street, Dublin 2

General Secretary of Association of Garda Sergeants and Inspectors John Jacob, with President of the Association of Garda Sergeants and Inspectors Antoinette Cunningham (top) and members of both organisations protesting over the Government “reneging on their promises and obligations in relation to members of the Gardai who are seeking a pay restoration”.

Rollingnews

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A very pleasing short by London based animator and wildlife fan Will Rose. To wit:

Eagle Blue lives high on a mountain top above a sleepy town below. With hungry chicks to feed she may lured in to the town by the temptation of an easy meal. Set to the music ‘This is a True Heart’ by Julia Holter.

How the Music of Julia Holter Inspired Will Rose’s Animated Short ‘Eagle Blue’ (Directors Notes)

curiousbrain

TheMushBurgersweb

The Mushburgers.

Shane Latimer (guitar/synth), Eamonn Colgan (guitar/theremin), Cormac O’Brien (bass) and Shane O’Donovan (drums).

Big valves. Epic reverb.

Eamonn writes:

The sun is shinning and nothing celebrates sunshine like good old fashioned surf music. (we) The Mushburgers have a new video (above) from our gig last week at The Generator (Smithfield, Dublin 7) .We’ll be onstage next month at The Sea Sessions (link below),.If anyone would like to book us to soundtrack their summer partaay. Ya’ll can contact us here mushburgersband@gmail.com…

The Musburgers at Sea Sessions)

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derek

From top: Committee Room, Leinster House: Derek Mooney

Everyone’s talking about New Politics.

But no one will say what it means.

Until NOW!

Derek Mooney writes:

What exactly is this “New Politics” we have been reading and hearing about so much lately?

It was the question that should have occurred to me as soon as the Public Relations Institute asked me to participate in a panel discussion they held last Thursday as part of a half day seminar entitled: Public Affairs in the era of ‘New Politics’.

But it didn’t. Like many others, I have been throwing about the phrase “new politics” in the two and a half weeks since the Dáil elected a Taoiseach as if everyone understands what it means.

But do we? Do the people who are supposedly responsible for our ‘new ‘politics even understand what the phrase means or what the concept is meant to encompass, apart from differentiating it from the “old politics”?

Do we know in what way it is supposed to be different or why?

Unfortunately for me, this simple basic question only popped into my head while sitting on the dais last Thursday rather than during the days of preparation beforehand.

But with each challenge comes an opportunity. Just as the question came in to my head the discussion opened out to the floor and with it came a rare moment of lucidity, dare I say: an epiphany.

Just then I heard a familiar voice re-enter the discussion to offer a definition “new politics”. It was a very familiar voice: it was mine.

The definition I came up with is quite simple: ‘new politics should be about policy not personality’.

Don’t get me wrong, I am no Pollyanna. I do not think that politics has changed overnight and that we have reached now some utopian perfection where every TD and Senator has suddenly become high-minded and abandoned all thoughts of party loyalty and personal advancement in favour of the common good

I also grasp that my definition might sound a little glib or overly simplistic but bear with me and I will try and explain why I think the definition I offer is valid.

One of the greatest failing of our supposed “old politics” was that most political crises of the past were not resolved by any great changes of policy or direction but by the drama of a political head on a platter.

Someone, usually not one of the main protagonists, was designated as the fall guy, they paid the price and the system continued along without change or reform, once the crowd’s lust for some blood on the carpet was sated.

By making a few boring, even tedious, changes to how Dáil committees operate and allowing them to actually oversee public policy and by making parliamentary questions work, we may just have moved the focus back on to the more complex issues of policy rather than the more simplistic and entertaining issue of personality.

One of the many reasons why the global economic crisis hit Ireland worse than other places is because public policy and economic dogma here had gone for too long unchallenged. The regulators went unregulated, civil society and the party system failed to advance realistic alternatives.

One of the most curious, and perhaps most re-assuring aspects to this gradual move to new politics is the fact that it has not come about by design. It is not the brain child of some think-tank or research group, rather it is the response of practising politicians working together to find a way of dealing with the result of the results of the last general election.

To their credit, the reform committee chaired by Ceann Comhairle, Sean Ó Fearghaill, comprising TDs from across the political spectrum worked quietly and quite speedily to devise an agreed reform package which though hardly exciting or thrilling may just be about to make day-to-day politics more responsive and more about policy.

The reforms agreed by committee from the establishment of a budgetary oversight committee to allowing the Ceann Comhairle to decide on the relevance of ministerial replies to parliamentary questions and the establishment of a league table of ministers who fail to properly answer questions move us closer to the levels of accountability and answerability we should have had long back.

No doubt we will continue to see “old politics” re-emerge from time to time, indeed it is hard to see Enda Kenny’s appointment of his expanded cohort of Minsters of State as an exercise is anything other than the old politics of personality – the personality in question being his and its maintenance in office for as long as it possible.

We see it too in the handling of the O’Higgins Report and the embroiling of the Garda Commissioner in the controversy.

We can hope however, as the Dáil and its committees begin to exert their new powers and their responsibilities, to see less of the old politics, but not so much less that politics losses its touch of theatricality, drama and odd moments of farce.

Not all aspects of the old politics should be abandoned.

Derek Mooney is a communications and public affairs consultant. He previously served as a Ministerial Adviser to the Fianna Fáil led government 2004 – 2010. Follow Derek on Twitter: @dsmooney