A big, warm thank you to clockwise from top left: ‘Preposterous‘, Vanessa Foran, Marcel Kreuger; Neil Curran and Olga Cronin, our panel on last night’s Broadsheet on the Telly.
The show, produced by Neil, can be viewed in its entirety above.
At a glance guide:
1:40 – Leo Varadkar and the Bank of Mum & Dad
17:56 – Micheál Martin’s change of mind
39:22 – “Marcel, Please explain whats going on in Germany?”
46:28 – Bodger, Amnesty International and George Soros
1:09:20 – Lifting of Good Friday alcohol ban
1:14:25 – “Time now to get rid of the Angelus”
1:20:04 – Disclosures Tribunal update with Olga
1:44:38 – Entertainment slot with Neil
1:54:54 – “Does anyone recognise the man behind my shoulder?”
Tape by Vienna/Zagreb-based artist collective Numen: one of four exhibits for ‘Drawing In Space’ at the Des Moines Art Centre in Iowa, featuring artists working exclusively in the medium of tape.
Yes, tape.
The installation, consisting of clear packing tape suspended from the walls of the gallery, invites visitorsto explore it from within, as long as they move clockwise in their socks.
Guitarist John Piet de Klerk and trombonist Patrick Witberg from 18-piece Dutch Group ‘JP & Seeger Sessions’ help launch Tradfest, Ireland’s largest festival of Trad and Folk Music, which is currently underway in Temple Bar.
According the reasearch undertaken by Behaviours & Attitudes, “over 60% of international visitors were only in Dublin because of Tradfest”.
Tony Groves (right) and Martin McMahon (left) welcome Ibrahim Halawa into the ‘tortoise shack’ for a wide ranging chat.
Martin writes:
Ibrahim Halawa has experienced more in the last five years than most will (or want to) in their life, and while he has lost some of his youth, based on his work with human rights organisations and homelessness charities, he has lost none of his humanity
We discuss: Missing out on Dublin GAA and real chipper chips!; His work since he’s come home; The very surprising career turn he’s about to embark on; The haters and the conspiracy nutters. What is an Irish person in 2018.
We were genuinely blown away by the humility and drive of this young Irish man.
This is recorded in a public area and there’s plenty of background noise, but that is part of the craic, trust us.
irivin Muchnik in conversation with OTB:AMyesterday; Larry Nasser (left) and George Gibney
US-based journalist irvin Muchnik writes:
For a long time I have held the view that the Irish victims of George Gibney — perhaps the most notorious at-large sex abuser in international sports history — along with their families and advocates, have done quite enough of the heavy lifting in the quest for long-delayed justice and closure.
Though it’s true that it was the warps in the Irish criminal justice system that initially let Gibney off the hook for his crimes there, and it was cronyism and corruption in high places there that smoothed his passage to the United States, there should be a proverbial statute of limitations on repeated dashed expectations.
Somewhere along the way of the past quarter of a century, roaming unaccountably free across Colorado, Utah, California, Florida, and points in between, Gibney became, fundamentally, a problem for his pliant hosts, the Americans, to grasp and resolve.
My recently concluded Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security for Gibney’s immigration records establishes that friendly forces in the US enabled the perpetuation of this heinous global sports cover-up.
In all likelihood, it was the apparatchiks of the American Swimming Coaches Association who set up Gibney at the North Jeffco Swim Club in Arvada, Colorado, in the mid-1990s.
And after Gibney, in an apparent panic, filed for naturalized citizenship some 16 years into his unsettled, multi-state alien residency here — and concealed from the application his 27-count criminal indictment in Ireland — it was the American government, in 2010, that curiously ruled, in conjunction with the rejection of that application, that he could not be deported.
Therefore, it is up to people of the US to stand up for what is right.
Stand up for what Judge Charles R. Breyer, in the final hearing of the FOIA case, aptly called a determination of whether our immigration system was a perversity, some sort of “haven for pedophiles.”
No Irish authority can compel the American government to look hard and honorably at the peculiar loopholes Gibney exploited in order to become, in his senescence, ingrained in the community of Altamonte Springs, Florida, like a retired Treblinka gate guard.
No bloc of Irish voters exists to pressure American politicians to probe the bizarre and contradictory moves documented in the Gibney file by, first, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and, second, U.S. Immigration and Citizenship Services (USCIS).
Anyway, this has been my position.
But this week it changed.
It changed because an independent and overarching event intervened. A sicko doctor at Michigan State University named Larry Nassar was convicted and sentenced in his molestations of well over 100 girls and young women under the aegis of USA Gymnastics.
Heads are rolling at both institutions.
In their wake is a unique, indeed historic, opportunity to join the campaign to extradite and try George Gibney with the newly risen awareness of the abuses of power, safety, and decency throughout the youth programs of Olympic sports bodies everywhere.
And that is why I appeal to those good people in Ireland to suck it up one more time and make their voices heard to those Americans with good instincts on this issue.
They include Senator Dianne Feinstein and Congresswoman Jackie Speier, to whom Teachta Dála Maureen O’Sullivan last month already asked for help in the Gibney matter.
Such help must go beyond merely “raising questions” about immigration procedures. It also must facilitate the sharing of information collected by the Irish government (principally in reports of An Garda Síochána, the national police, and in the 1998 Murphy Inquiry into sexual abuse in Irish swimming) with appropriate American agencies (most especially the prosecutors’ offices in Florida, site of Gibney’s known heinous crime on American soil).
When the last page of the last chapter is written on George Gibney, it will not be the story of an individual monster, any more than Larry Nassar’s was. It will be a web of epic failures of the money-driven tropisms of kid sports programs.
They were supposed to be all about physical fitness and healthy competition. Instead, they became about gold medals and the runaway gravy train of the bureaucrats and obscenely well-heeled executives of the Olympic movement.
Coaches like to exhort their athletes: Give me one more lap. After bearing lifelong psychological damage and heartache, some for as long as 50 years, those who were scarred by Gibney, and those who support them, need to go ’round one more time here. There are no guarantees that we’ll succeed. But there’s the certainly that we can’t, unless we try.
For those of you just tuning in, here are key data points:
1990: In an elliptical conversation on a plane flight to an international competition, Irish Olympic swimmer Gary O’Toole is first tipped that Gibney had molested athletes beginning more than 20 years earlier. O’Toole starts designing the mechanisms to canvass Irish swimmers and get the word out to sport authorities and police.
1991: On a training trip, Gibney rapes and impregnates a 17-year-old swimmer he had earlier violated in Holland. The girl is drugged by an Irish swimming official and taken to England for a secret abortion.
1992: Gibney successfully applies for a US. visa under the Donnelly diversity lottery program. He attaches to his application both an American job offer letter and a “certificate of character” from a Garda precinct. The certificate, representing that Gibney enjoyed a spotless record, was issued at a point when allegations of the coach’s abuse were already surfacing and multiplying.
1993: Gibney is indicted on 27 counts of sex crimes against minors.
1994: The Irish Supreme Court halts Gibney’s prosecution on the grounds that some of the charges date too far back to allow a fair trial. One of the sitting justices, Susan Denham (later the chief justice), did not recuse herself from the case even though she is the sister of Gibney’s barrister Patrick Gageby.
Gibney moves to the US by way of Scotland.
1995: Gibney leaves the Colorado swim club where he was a coach following an allegation of sexual misconduct. He is not charged with a crime, but the episode leads to the outing of his Irish past in the local community and sparks many years of nomadic American residence and employment outside the aquatics industry.
1998: The Murphy Commission concludes, “In light of the charges arising out of the Garda investigation the complainants were vindicated.”
2006: RTÉ’s Prime Time interviews Gibney victims on camera (including the victim of the 1991 Florida rape); confronts Gibney in Calistoga, California; and quotes the local sheriff confirming that Gibney was on the radar of both the local sheriff’s office and the FBI.
2008: Justine McCarthy publishes the book Deep Deception: Ireland’s Swimming Scandals.
2010: Irish-American Evin Daly, head of the Florida anti-abuse organization One Child International, publishes information on Gibney’s history and submits it to the federal government.
Gibney applies for citizenship.
In an internal memorandum, the government’s ICE agency memorializes the opinion that Gibney is not removable from the country
After first warning Gibney that his citizenship application was defective in its answer to the question of whether he had ever been charged with or convicted of a crime, USCIS denies the application.
The great JK Simmons stars in a rather superb Funny Or Die sketch wherein long haired businessmen exchange typically inane small talk prior to getting down to brass tacks, rolling out the dog and pony show and generally keeping it linear.
Co-starring writers/directors/actors Ben Wietmarschen, George Kareman and Pat O’Brien.
How does @ButlersChocs get away with commandeering most of the pavement on this very tight corner of South William Street & Exchequer Street? People were literally falling over each other trying to get past, and those were able-bodied & fully-sighted people. pic.twitter.com/QdjvRjmbiH