Galway, this afternoon.
Meanwhile, around the side of Whelan’s in Dublin:
Yay!
Via Gary McGinty
The former Squibb Park in Brooklyn, New York.
Renamed after the late Beastie Boy following a campaign by the Brooklyn Heights Blog community.
Ciaran Le Cool writes:
The newly opened Adam Yauch park in Brooklyn a year after his death. Would love to know what readers consider best song/ MCA lyrics. For me, it’s either ‘intergalactic’ or this.
Now You Can Visit Adam Yauch Park (Slate)
The world’s friendliest bike cities in 2013, as judged by two-wheeled advocacy group Copenhagenize, [whose clients include Ireland’s National Transport Authority].
With Dublin at number six ninee eleventh, just behind damn fixie-clogged Berlin.
The large numbers denote key criteria including: has the city planned for bike racks? Are roads designed for bikes? And will i get my bike nicked? is there a strong bike culture in a city?
So why Dublin?
Sez Copenhagenize:
Dublin is the Great Bike Hope among Emerging Bicycle Cities. Visionary political will can be all too fleeting but the city seems to keep on pushing forward. The city still has bicycles on the brain and the National Transport Authority is trying to provide a tailwind. Dublin’s incredibly successful bike share programme has been instrumental in reestablishing the bicycle on the urban landscape. Now larger-scale infrastructure projects and a city-wide cycling strategy can take the city to the next level as it tackles rising urbanisation with little room left for more cars. 30 km/h zones and bicycle infrastructure have combined to make Dublin the safest EU capital.
With a modal share of 7.5%, the city centre can sometimes boast of double digits. An incredible rise over just six or so years. Dublin is the only city after Amsterdam and Copenhagen to retain their placement on the Index. They scored high on the bonus points. They remain an inspiration and a city to watch.
It gets better:
As we wrote in 2011, “The leading bicycle city in the Anglo-Saxon world got to where they are because of ballsy political decision-making. A bridgehead is established.”
It looks like Dublin has kept the bridgehead secure and is now moving forward into the battle to make their city more liveable and worthy of this new century. Keep the momentum and don’t be afraid to push it harder.
Steady on.
The World’s Top Bike-Friendly Cities (Goodis)
Explore the Copenhagenize Index here
Thanks Spaghetti Hoop
Animator Mel Roach’s rather excellent short about a dog with superpowered rocket farts and his owner, Bob.
In this short documentary, Shaped on all Six Sides, directed by Kat Gardiner, carpenter Andy Smith shares his thoughts about a thing some men do because they can’t have babies.
Mmf.

Prof Patricia Casey is an anagram of A Papacy Crosier Fit.
— Bernie Linnane (@Berlinnaeus) May 3, 2013
Unless you can do better?
Previously: That Which We Call A Rose
The host with the most to hide.
After the statement [by the Catholic Bishops of Ireland] was issued, Cardinal Sean Brady told RTE that the bishops believed that the legislation was a denial of religious freedom.
Cardinal Brady said the bishops had not discussed if Communion should be refused to politicians who supported the bill.
In February, Cardinal Raymond L. Burke, the former archbishop of St. Louis and the head of the Vatican court, urged priests to withdraw communion from politicians who supported abortion legislation in Ireland.
He told the newspaper The Catholic Voice that the legalisation of abortion in Ireland would create a “culture of death.”
Cardinal Brady said that though the bishops were calling on parliamentary representatives to oppose the bill, “there would be a great reluctance to politicise the Eucharist.”
Politicians, he said, “have an obligation to oppose the laws that are attacking something so fundamental as the right to life and they would have to follow their own conscience.”
We’ve missed him.
He’s been a wafer so long.
Wafer.
Oh, suit yourselves.
(RTE)
May the 4th be with you.
Another one for the Broadsheet Imperial Archive.
Your ‘International Star Wars Day’ Episode VII Talking Points (Atlantic Wire)
(Thanks James Lynch)