Thanks Barry Commins
The Opus Office Tower – a 21 story office building with a void at its center (supply your own metaphor) due for completion in Dubai by 2016, designed by Zaha-Hadid architects, what sez:
The Opus comprises two structures, conceived as a single cube eroded by a free-form void, which appears to ‘hover’ above ground-level. A pixilated reflective façade renders the cube full by day; by night, it ‘dematerializes’ as light floods the void.
John Mulcahy was appointed to the board of NAMA on March 7, 2012 for a five-year term.
From NAMA’s website:
“John Mulcahy was appointed Head of Portfolio Management of the National Asset Management Agency in March 2010 and subsequently Head of Asset Management in March 2012. Prior to that he was chairman and CEO of Jones Lang LaSalle Ireland. He is a Chartered Surveyor and a member of the Property Advisory Committee of the National Pensions Reserve Fund.”
But.
John Mulcahy to leave #nama as board member and head of asset management
— Dearbhail McDonald (@DearbhailDibs) October 14, 2013
Previously: NAMA: And Then There Were Seven
The Despised
at
(Eamon Gilmore and Joan Burton at the Labour parliamentary party’s think-in last month)
Beyond that, the country can’t stand Labour. Or its leader. Within the party, Eamon’s leadership is under threat from Joan Burton. Somehow, Joan has positioned herself as the protector of old Labour values, while attacking the unemployed and their lifestyle and slashing away at the social protections that we – in our work and our taxes – have already paid for.
As if Eamon hasn’t enough to worry about, last week he and his comrades got a kick in the teeth from the German SPD. The SPD is negotiating to go into coalition government with Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats. And they’ve been laying down conditions that involve this country.
No deal, they told Merkel, until you force the Irish political classes to stop mollycoddling big business. And, Angela – you know how the Irish politicians expect help with reducing the banking debts they’ve heaped on to their citizens? If you want the SPD to prop up your government, knock that on the head.
…In short, Eamon is being shafted by his comrades abroad, his comrades at home are waiting for the appropriate moment to slip a knife between his ribs and the Irish electorate look on him with the kind of distaste usually reserved for a genital rash.
We understand Gilmore only too well (Gene Kerrigan, Sunday Independent)
(Mark Stedman/Photocall Ireland)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bhr-xnP8TkM
A short film about a woman with a talking vagina, for The 48 Hour Film Project Dublin 2013.
Starring Meabh O’Leary and Niall Cutler. Featuring Megan Woods as The Vagina.
Written/Directed/Shot by Kate Dolan, Megan Woods, Lina M Schulz and Evelyn Suttle. Edited by Kate Dolan.
Kate writes:
“Last weekend myself and three other ladies made a film about a talking vagina for the 48HFP Dublin edition. It may give a much-needed pick-me-up to people awaiting the Budget and/or people who are stuffed into a Dart carriage this morning.”
“The weatherbeaten slopes of Slieve Martin, County Down team with hundreds of scarlet clad figures. 400 mountain bikers think they can outfox Gee Atherton in the 2013 Redbull Foxhunt which turns the fear and ecstasy of a hunt in on itself, making prey of the hunters.”
Yikes.
TJ O’Grady Peyton writes:
Just wanted to share a video that I directed last weekend. It’s an annual race for 400 mountain bike racers who get the chance to race a pro (Gee Atherton). It’s called Foxhunt. FYI – It’s sponsored by Redbull, but hopefully it may be of interested to some people out there..
The Ground Will Shake – Miss Serene
Alex Quigley writes:
My mate Fred directed it, and hoping to ask him to be my best man if I can get a hold of him. Might even have a band for the wedding sewn up too!
‘Miss Serene‘ is the debut single from The Ground Will Shake and will be released in Tower Records, Dublin on November 1 at 6pm.
(Thanks Alex Quigley)
Harry Browne, writes:
The Press Ombudsman, Prof John Horgan, recently decided on my complaint against your newspaper’s June 15th review of my book The Frontman: Bono (In the Name of Power).
He wrote: “[T]he complainant’s assertions that this review contained breaches of Principles 1 and 2 and part of Principle 4 of the Code of Practice were sufficiently well documented to require a remedy.”
My well documented assertions were about breaches of three core journalistic principles: “truth and accuracy”, “distinguishing fact and comment” and “respect for rights”, particularly the right not to be subjected to unfounded accusations.
The ombudsman also decided that, “on balance”, a missive from me on your letters page would be sufficient remedy for a litany of breaches in a 1,300-word article, covering most of a page in your Weekend Review.
On that point I respectfully disagree with Prof Horgan. There is a vast imbalance in size, authority and web-searchability between that slot and this one. And it is your job, not mine, to correct errors in The Irish Times.
Nonetheless, now that his decision is made, your readers should learn, belatedly, of my well-documented complaint.
The Frontman is a deliberately critical but scrupulous polemic about Bono. A leading scholar of Africa and human rights, Alex de Waal, says the book “acknowledges Bono’s practical contributions to a more humane version of global capitalism, but demonstrates how good intentions can be no alibi for fronting for the status quo”.
Your newspaper’s review, however, paints The Frontman as a “mean-spirited” screed, in which a Politically Correct Catholic-nationalist sectarian (me!) throws around absurd and half-baked accusations willy-nilly in a breathless effort to show that “in every possible way Bono is WRONG” (sic capital letters).
The factual errors in your review range from the trivial (no, I don’t contradict myself about whether Bono is actually “cool”) to the sickeningly serious (no, I don’t say he deserved to be the victim of sectarian bullying as a teenager).
To be sure, my book is hard on Bono. But it doesn’t say, as your caption suggests, that he personally prolonged the Troubles!
It doesn’t credulously take the word of a single dubious source to state that Bono doesn’t give “all that much” to charity. Indeed it doesn’t criticise the level of Bono’s charitable giving.
It doesn’t attack Bono for “publicly disagreeing in Africa with someone who wasn’t white”. Unless, that is, you believe those words accurately summarise a passage in which I criticise Bono for shouting “Bollocks!” and “That’s bullshit!” at Ugandan journalist Andrew Mwenda.
I don’t say Bono is WRONG for “not being black”. Or that he is “a heartless Ayn Rand disciple”. (The Frontman locates Bono’s politics within the trajectory of “heartful” liberalism.) Or that he – no, enough, you already know all this, and others should be getting the picture.
The Irish Times chose to (slowly) dispute my well-documented corrections from the time I first submitted them on June 14th, the day after the article appeared online and before it had gone to print. You continue to publish it on your website, in effect repeating your errors.
You and your writers are entitled to your own opinions, but not to your own facts. One can only wonder why you invented a few with which to discredit me and defend Bono.
Harry Browne
The Irish Times responds:
The Editor writes: Press Ombudsman John Horgan ruled as follows in rejecting Mr Harry Browne’s complaint:
“The Press Ombudsman has decided that The Irish Times made an offer of sufficient remedial action to resolve a complaint by Mr Harry Browne that the newspaper’s review of a book he wrote about Bono . . . contained erroneous statement (Principle 1)*, comment or conjecture reported as fact (Principle 2) and unfounded accusations (Principle 4) . . .” (*Principles from Press Council Code of Practice)
The full Press Council upheld the Ombudsman’s decision on Mr Browne’s appeal.
Review of Browne’s Bono book (Irish Times letters)
Previously: Critic Proof













