“Some mornings you should just stay in bed.”
Episode 2: The Morning After
Long Dark Twenties is a five-part weekly comedy mini-series created by writer/performers Kelly Shatter, Luke Benson and Kevin Handy.
Last week: Episode 1
“Some mornings you should just stay in bed.”
Episode 2: The Morning After
Long Dark Twenties is a five-part weekly comedy mini-series created by writer/performers Kelly Shatter, Luke Benson and Kevin Handy.
Last week: Episode 1
Rory P writes:
On October 5, the Seanad voted on a motion calling on the Irish Government to reject provisional application of CETA (Canadian version of TTIP.)
This means the Irish parliament became the first parliament in the world to take a vote on CETA. Which sounds impressive.
What sounds even more impressive, the motion passed! (By one vote.)
I’m wondering though, what does it mean? What effect does passing this motion ultimately have?
Anyone?
Update: The dystopian world of CETA and new respect for Ireland’s Senate (Dr Cara Augustenborg)
Need more Carrigstown and Kerry Katona?
Read on.
Sinead Harrington writes:
Former girl group star and reality TV queen Kerry Katona will be live in studio with Ray to discuss reuniting with her husband George Kay, juggling work with five children and will also reveal her plans for the future.
To mark its recent 4,000th episode, three Fair City stars will join Ray on the couch. Actor Bryan Murray who plays lovable rogue Bob, Rebecca Grimes who plays sex siren Hayley and Tony Tormey whose character love rat Paul Brennan has everyone talking, will chat about life on Carrigstown and give Ray the low down on a few behind-the-scenes secrets!
Writer Sophie White will share her powerful story about suffering from a bad ecstasy trip at Electric Picnic, which led to her having a breakdown…
…Two well known faces will go head to head in a lip sync battle in aid of the Marie Keating Foundation’s ‘Fake some Noise’ campaign. And musical lovers are in for treat as the stars of the West End musical version of The Commitments will also perform a special medley of some of their biggest hits.
*kicks telly, heads to McCoy’s*
FIGHT!
The Ray D’Arcy Show this Saturday 8th October, RTÉ One, 9:35pm.
Pic: RTÉ
This afternoon.
Spotted on Constitution Hill, Dublin 7.
Thanks John Gallen
Previously: Mattress Mick on Broadsheet
Enda Kenny’s constituency office in Castlebar, Co Mayo in 2015
RTE reports:
A woman has been arrested following an incident at the Taoiseach’s constituency office in Castlebar, Co Mayo.
The woman, who is believed to have been protesting about the situation in Syria, daubed red paint on the building which is situated on Tucker Street in the town centre.
The Taoiseach was not in the building at the time.
Woman arrested after incident at Taoiseach’s Mayo office (RTE)
Sam Boal/Rollingnews
To mark World Homeless Day.
An evening with homelessness activist Peter McVerry’ including a screening of the documentary Peter McVerry: A View From The Basement and a chat with Fintan O’Toole at the Light House Cinema starting at 6.30pm.
Alternatively:
Peter McVerry at the launch of the Action Plan on Homelessness last month
….Fr Peter McVerry wants to get back to the 80s, where we were building up to 8,000 “social houses” every year. Why? Does he see home ownership as a bad thing? Why else would he be so in favour of inflating the “social housing” market – property that would forever remain in the state’s hands?
The British Left never forgave Thatcher for “right to buy,” which allowed the low income to buy their council houses. Private property being the original sin of the Left, this broke the chains that bound many of Britain’s poorer with the powerful state. US broadcaster Dennis Prager says “the bigger the state, the smaller the citizen,” and that’s what gets Leftists votes.
We entirely sympathise with people on short-term leases, who can see a hike in their rent down the road. But what do you expect with such an appallingly regulated sector? Landlords are only in that favourable position due to that tired but true term: supply-and-demand.
If the stock of housing were to keep up with demand, no landlord could afford to lose good, reliable tenants; longer-term leases, with rent freezes, would be a competitive advantage as landlords sought the best tenants. (And, given that we rate tradesmen, teachers and restaurants online, why not throw in a website that rates tenants?)
The market rate is, after all, contingent on what the state will allow it to be, reflective of land zoning, planning permission, and a plethora of costly regulations.
Alas, I dare say, many of McVerry’s supporters would be the same type of people who would turn their noses up at a block of apartments being built in their neighbourhood.
Of course McVerry is correct on many points; relative to wages, housing is stupidly expensive in Ireland. But the solutions are not so forthcoming.
Releasing state-controlled land; building taller buildings to make better use of acreage and afford us the density of population required to make quality public transport possible; tackling the cost of grossly inflated agricultural land – all of these solutions are actively fought by progressives.
You can’t have a competitive property market and an 19th Century idyll at the same time, folks.
We need sustainable solutions here. We need tough, open discussions. We need accurate figures. McVerry’s is not the only voice in this debate.
Rollingnews
Hello you.
YIKES!
Tomboktu writes:
Did you see who is an associate researcher at the School of Social Policy, Social Work and Social Justice at UCD?
Mary Tyler Moore, TV Guide, Summer, 1977
Time to think outside the box set.
Frilly Keane writes:
There was a bitta argy bargy here earlier this week on one of Bertie’s TV Trailer Park threads. Lads throwing shapes; ‘let’s see if you can do better’ kinda stuff, and it wasn’t even one of the better ding dongs.
But the thing that stayed on with me was that we all love the telly, and we all fight over it, and I didn’t even notice my role in it until yesterday morning when I went on (an probably on) about Mary Tyler Moore and all its connections. That show ended in the Silver Jubilee year. 1977. FFS that’s 39 years ago.
But it can’t be helped. I love the telly with such affection and commitment that I didn’t even really notice how much respect until yesterday.
Oddly enough for almost 3 years I didn’t watch any telly, none. Instead I wrote a book with my screen time. It came to a sudden stop when I was introduced to the entire Sopranos catalogue on a Media Player, the black box. And I haven’t strayed since.
These days the only non-scripted telly I set time aside for besides Sport, News etc, is Bake Off and I’m a Celebrity.
Back in the Mary Tyler Moore days a show was done when the writers and actors said so, not the broadcasters and exec producers. Kojak, Taxi, Starsky n’ Hutch didn’t go beyond 5 runs.
I’ll concede an exception; M*A*S*H which seemed to on for decades, but it pretty much wrote itself and a balanced ensemble cast helped it continue (IMO btw) which is probably why Friends never seems to have ended at all. But then Chandler and Monica probably earned more per episode than Radar and Hotlips got for 10 years of graft.
Those early days of colour telly and aerial transmission introduced incredible television creations and characters.
Kid Curry and Hannibal Hayes, Jill Monroe (Charlies Angles is credited as been the first “Jiggle TV” production btw), Buck Rodgers, McCloud, Mannix (remember the cars) and speaking of cars, Jim Rockford (who was a great Big Screen to Small Screen and back again example) and likewise the A-Team! Columbo, Mrs Bridges and Captain Peacock.
And the theme tunes, feck it, every so often one come out over wireless; Hill Street Blues, Greatest American Hero, and this’ll will have some of ye going all day – ‘Baby, if you ever wondered, wondered whatever became of me, I’m living on the air’ …. That’s all ye’re getting; now name that show.
This is probably why I loved Vinyl,. It was authentic to the era when the television became a utility in every house, and not a luxury. It was over the top, slick, styled and accurate and I loved it. But then I enjoyed Revolution & Myles Matheson so maybe I’m the last one to go on about it.
Ara’ I could on for a fortnight here. But a few last things I’ll leave ye with;
My earliest tv memory was wetting myself the day Oscar the Grouch turned dirty carpet green and learning that Cookie Monster was blue. (Yep the day the colour telly arrived.)
If ye’re of a mind see if ye can pull down the original Upstairs Downstairs, (4 years about 60 episodes) it’s not for everyone I know, but hard facts and themes were introduced by LWT that nobody else would touch till the late 80s and 90s, and some wouldn’t pass the PC standards team today.
And Treme, a two season’er, and worth every minute you have to click back to get the dialogue and the jist correct for yourself, and have the search engine running if ye do.
Finally, I alone in thinking Sorkin’s Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip should have got anudder season?
So till next First Friday; the month of the Holy Souls.
Frilly keane’s column will appear here on the first Friday of every month. Follow Frilly on Twitter: @frillykeane
It’s 09:36am, Coldplay tickets on sale less than an hour – resale tickets. Can you explain @TicketmasterIre #ticketmaster #coldplay pic.twitter.com/omsyG49d3N
— Really Good Business (@rgb_ie) October 7, 2016
Don’t think of it as having failed to get a #Coldplay ticket. You’ve just consciously uncoupled yourself from the gig.
— Mallow News (@MallowNews) October 7, 2016
Previously: Ticketmaster on Broadsheet