Mmm.
Ciaran McCarthy writes:
Spotted this two-for-one gem in The Asia Market on Drury Street at lunchtime. Omnomnom…
INM to announce it’s looking for new ‘Sunday Independent’ editor as Anne Harris’ contract ends http://t.co/J2x03Y9ZoC via @TomLyonzBiz
— David Cochrane (@davidcochrane) November 21, 2014
Denis: “Mwahahahahahahah.”
(Leon Farrell/Photocall Ireland)
What you may need to know:
1. Fantasy based on The Spook’s Apprentice, the first book of Joseph Delaney’s Wardstone Chronicles.
2. There are 13 books in the series. It’s safe to say that there won’t be two movies.
3. Seventh Son has had a very troubled history. Originally due for release in February 2013, it was delayed when Legendary Pictures’ distribution deal with Warner Bros. ended. Universal are now distributing, and I’d say Warners are thrilled with themselves.
4. Needs some ‘Maiden.
5. “So, uh Jeff… are you sticking with that voice for the whole movie?” It sounds like Bridges is channelling Mr. Magoo.
6. Broadsheet Prognosis: The Big Excalibowski.
Release Date: February 17, 2015.
(DelBoy is in full-on Billie Barry mode. Mark blogs about film, TV and other stuff at WhyBother.ie)
https://soundcloud.com/reekussunfare/paul-cleary-of-the-blades-i-still-believe/s-Rc75D
I still believe
Hope and possibilities are found
In every sight and every sound
There’s nothing we don’t know, then we growSo young there’s almost nothing to forget
No disappointment or regret
The promise of the new, then we grewDon’t believe that water turns to wine
Or that broken hearts are nothing new
Don’t believe that grief is healed by time
That life is fair and dreams come true
But I believe, I still believe in you
I Still Believe – Paul Cleary.
Chelsea White writes:
Paul Cleary, of The Blades, has been working on some new material, and we at Reekus Records are proud to debut his newest song, ‘I Still Believe’. The Blades are performing in a few weeks at The Olympia Theatre, on 5 December with Gangs in support.. You can buy tickets here, but be fast because it’s heading towards a sell-out…
G’wan The Blades.
As part of his 2011 master’s thesis, US design student Travis Purrington reimagined the American dollar, to wit:
…inspired by the Swiss Franc’s (CHF) ambitious redesign process (the currency is thoroughly redesigned every 20 years by way of contest) The goal was to develop a similar updated iconographic system better representing the advancements and culture within the American society. This particular series plays on themes of human discovery and endeavors to connect achievement, theory and the fundamental properties of life.
Different sized bills? No dead presidents? Nice try, buddy.
More detail here.
Ryan Tubridy in Montrose today
Uncanny likeness, in fairness..
The annual ‘jumper on’.
A tradition as old as the recession itself.
Sinead Harrington writes;
Viewers responded magnificently to Ryan’s request for a home made Christmas Jumper for this year’s show. He is pictured wearing a hand knitted jumper sent in by a viewer Fionnuala Hayward from County Wicklow. Ryan is also holding a Toy Show Jumper tree featuring had knitted jumpers made by sixth class in Scoil Bhríde (Cailíní), Blanchardstown.
The Late Late Toy Show airs next Friday on RTÉ 1.
Meanwhile on TV3…
Brian McFadden was on the Late Lunch Live ahead of the live TV3 Christmas Toy Show in the RDs tonight at 8pm.
Brian will be co-presenting the show with Karen Koster and a little help from Jedward.
He’s allowed to wear a normal jumper.
Free Dessie Ellis, Sinn Féin TD, spoke this morning on the Domestic Violence (Amendment) Bill 2014.
Yesterday, I stood with party colleagues and other members of the Oireachtas at the Dáil gates for a minute’s silence in memory of the men and women and children who have died at the hands of their partner or ex-partner since 1996. This was a very poignant event coming on the International Day Opposing Violence Against Women. A shocking 78 women and 10 children have been murdered in these 18 years. The event was organised by Women’s Aid who had laid out shoes along a blank sheet to mark a timeline of these needless and tragic deaths. Shoes, flat heels and sandals standing in silent memoriam of the lives stolen. These lives as the vigil so movingly stated are stolen lives. They are stolen from their families, their friends, their communities. Snuffed out by an abuser who should’ve been stopped.
One in five women experience domestic violence in their lifetime. This ranges from physical, emotional, sexual to financial abuse. From abuse, threats to kill and abuse behaviour, to stalking and harassment. By their very nature these are mostly crimes which go on behind closed doors when the curtains are drawn when the world around stops looking. But it also happens right out in the open.
We must strive to improve public awareness of the risk factors of domestic violence and to encourage everyone to make their homes, their community, their circle of friends, a place where this kind of abuse will never be accepted. Because unfortunately we have a culture today where subtly every day teaches young men to do many of the things that can lead to domestic violence. This trend in our society is called the ‘rape culture’. Its name is shocking and some dismiss this as over over the top but the symptoms are undeniable and its effects illustrated by those 78 empty womens’ shoes are too horrific to ignore. Rape culture is the tendency in modern culture to dehumanise, devalue and commodify women. It has always been there but has become much more obvious in the modern era with the partial successes of the early feminist movement and the 24-hour consumer capitalist culture which has sprung up alongside the internet.
Technology is not to blame but it is often the medium through which this culture finds its most vile expression. This tendency creates a culture which normalises the idea that women’s bodies are not wholly their own. It encourages blaming rape victims instead of rapists. It jokes about men who beat their partners and it belittles, demonises and threatens all those who challenge it. This is the culture our young men are growing up in.
It seems like every week there is a new case of a woman who has been a victim of sexual assault who has watched her abuser go free because a judge felt sympathetic to the criminal. These judges have handed down fines for which must be the vile and reprehensible crimes a person can commit. This is a slap in the face to those who sought to have their attacker prosecuted but it also says to women and girls who are victims of sexual violence: Don’t bother, the state will not punish your attacker but you will be put through the mill anyway.
As with many of our worst social issues, there are why many whose voices are not heard. This is why we have brought the bill. It’s to try to make it easier for people to flee this kind of abuse. It is crucial that we promote opposition to this kind of behaviour.
But it is also essential, that people who seek to leave, to get out can do so, can be supported, validated and protected. That is what we seek to do.
*cough*
Full text of speech via Oireachtas.ie here.
Earlier: Staying In Tomorrow Night?
Previously: Falls Memory Syndrome
Ticket stub (top) and report in the Dublin Evening Standard
Bloody Sunday, 1920
Glasnevin Museum writes:
“At 3.15 on November 21, 1920 the much-publicised GAA match between Dublin, the Leinster champions, and Tipperary began when referee Mick Sammon threw in the ball. British forces enter Croke Park ten minutes into the match between Dublin and Tipperary. Shots are fired at players and the crowd. 14 civilians are killed. The majority of the Croke Park dead are buried in Glasnevin Cemetery over the following days. The youngest, Jerome O’Leary, is aged 10. Uniquely Glasnevin Cemetery holds the graves of not only civilians killed that day at Croke Park but also of suspected British intelligence officers shot that morning and men who carried out those shootings.
Pics:Glasnevin Museum, BBC
100 types of tea sorted into seven categories – Black, Green, Dark, Oolong, White, Rooibos and Yellow – available as a print from Pop Chart Lab.