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What you may need to know:

1. Classic rule of ill-advised sequels: do exactly the same thing all over again

2. Remember the first Horrible Bosses (2011)? Barely? Colin Farrell’s combover stole the show.

3. That said, Jamie Foxx’s character had the greatest name in recent movie history.

4. New baddies: Christoph Waltz and Chris ‘Craptain Kirk’ Pine.

5. Best YouTube comment: ‘0:42 seconds in, it shows Jamie Foxx drinking through a straw and they put a sound effect of an empty glass even though his drink is full…what the hell is the point of that?’

6. Rachel from Friends inviting men to pee on her = comedy gold.

Release Date: Not Soon Enough

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It’s a long shot…

Olga writes:

“I left my phone [similar to the one above] in a mini-bus taxi on Camden Street [Dublin] on Saturday night. When I later realised my phone was missing, a friend called my number and a guy, saying his name was Dan, answered it. He said he found it in the taxi and would return it to me the following day, Sunday.
I’ve bcalled the number he gave but it’s going straight to voicemail. I’ve also had friends text the number and there’s been no reply. Perhaps my friend misheard him when she took down the number? Or he lost his own phone? He was heading to a party in Leopardstown [Co Dublin] when my friend spoke to him. My phone is also going straight to voicemail…”

Anyone?

UPDATE: Olga writes: “His name wasn’t Dan, it was John! He has it and I’m collecting it after work tonight…”

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Galway yesterday.

Eamonn writes:

“Artist Joe Caslin perches on a window ledge at the Spanish Arch in Galway, after completing the installation of one of his Our Nation’s Sons images, for the launch of the 26th Galway Film Fleadh. The Film Fleadh opens tomorrow.Joe’s project, which involves displaying large scale drawings of young men on public structures, draws attention to the large number of Irish young men who are pushed the the very edges of society, creating within them feeling of neglect and apathy.”

Previously: Men Here

(Eamonn Farrell/Photocall Ireland)

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R writes:

“You might be interested in featuring this video about Limerick-based tattooer Ross Nagle (above) and a book of tattoo flash/tattoo art he’s publishing called Stab City. Ross really deserves a lot of credit for trying to raise the standard of tattooing in Ireland. He’s a modest guy but this book is a pretty big deal (perhaps only from the point of view of someone interested in tattooing at least) and I think he deserves a clap on the back. To help clarify: ‘Flash’ refers to sheets of tattoo iconography which were originally intended to be mounted on walls for customers to choose from. Lately ‘flash’ has become something collected – as a kind of outsider art I guess – in its own right. I have no financial or business connection with Ross, his shop, the publishers of this book, etc…..

Ross Nagle Tattoos (Facebook)

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