Monday, March 30, 2009

Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors at the Abbey Theatre

You'll already have seen the chance to win tickets to see Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors at Dublin's Abbey Theatre over on Culch.ie. Here's the new promo video for it.



...two sets of identical twins are separated in childhood. Years later, they all show up in the same place at the same time. The Comedy of Errors tells the story of a father, mother, brothers, sisters, masters and servants, all of whom find themselves confused, baffled and bewildered by the events of a single day.
I'm off to see it tomorrow night. From what I'm hearing, it should be great.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Kill Bill 1 and 2 and Forrest Gump in one minute, one take, with titles

I really loved these - for everyone who likes watching films in one minute and one take:

Kill Bill 1 and 2:



Forrest Gump:




From director Will who you can find on YouTube.

No more My Little Piebald newsletter?

Ah boo. Just as it was getting interesting (i.e. less personal), another satirical look at Ireland is put to rest.



Email below (formatting mine):

Dear readers,

Due to one of our editors dying, and another being called up to play for the Lions in South Africa, MLP will be appearing in a different format from now on.

Starting on May 1, My Little Piebald will publish a monthly edition on our website.

The format will be slightly different but we will maintain the low standards and unfinished feel that has been perfected in the weekly mailout.

In the meantime, we are leaving you with a selection of the worst articles which have appeared in My Little Piebald since it started last May.

We will let you know by email when there is new content available on the site.

Kind regards,

MLP
I found it funny that the link to their worst articles didn't work when I got this due to a mistake in the URL. That's just my sense of humour though.

Who will rise to take their place?

The Dublin Event Guide for Free Events has a website!

Well done Joerg!

The weekly email I source a lot of what I'll be doing for the week in Dublin, written by Joerg Steemuller and with more stuff in it than you could shake a stick at has found a new home online with a great URL to boot:

http://www.dublineventguide.com/

It's up to email 93 with 3622 subscribers, with 3,230 in the Facebook Group. Go have a look. It's a great way for any arts and cultural groups or events to get the word out there too.
To subscribe to the email, send an email to dublineventguide@gmail.com with the Subject "Subscribe".

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Summoning the Fail Whale - the twouble with twitters

One of the better takes on Twitter I've seen in a while from the folk over on Current TV.


Friday, March 20, 2009

Loving lamps, lints and Loki tonight in a love triangle

It's not as bad as it sounds.



Lampsy - the genius behind the I love lamp stickers around Dublin - was in touch to let me know about the new exhibition featuring themself, LadYLoKibeE and Lints in the All City Gallery - downstairs at All City Records on Crow Street in Temple Bar, Dublin - opening tonight.

The exhibition runs from March 21 to 28 from 12 to 6pm each day and you'll find them at the directions below:

Go to Dublin's Temple Bar Area. Over the Square, past Urban Outfitters, round the corner is Crow St. Walk up to Foggy Dew / Dame St end. Alternatively turn off Dame St and walk down - we're on the right hand side.

Get your house into the history books of Trinity College

At least.. that's what I think this means...

poster spotted in Trinity College Dublin featuring a picture of a house with The Ultimate House Party written on it and underneath is written Ents is loking to hold the largest house party that this college has ever see, With your help we can make this happen. If you have a free house and want to go down in Trinity History contact Nick Longworth at ents@tcdsu.org

So if you'd like to help the Ents hold the largest house party that Trinity has ever seen, maybe get in touch with Nick? I'm sure they'd only be drinking tea and the like and would do the washing up afterwards... wouldn't they?

It's viral advertising but still pretty damn cool for the F1 fans

I got sent this via email today from Vincenzo who works for "viral videos production company from London" asking if I'd embed it, it being a Vodafone viral.

My initial reaction was no thanks, but after watching what they've done with a Blackberry Storm and a McLaren Formula One car, I have to admit to being impressed - looks pretty cool...



I'm not sure if I'm more impressed by them getting Lewis Hamilton to do it or that office racing track. That looks pretty funky, eh?

Harry's lost his lost kitten poster

Harry seems to be getting around the city... This was on George's Street on Wednesday:

poster stuck to a pole on George's Street reading (all in caps) Have lost my *lost kitten* poster. It was stuck to this pole about a week ago. Have you seen it? It it exactly the same size as A4 paper, is made of white paper and has a picture of a kitten and the words *lost kitten* on it. If you have my poster, meet me here on Sunday at 5.30pm. No photocopies. I can offer you a lift on my bike wherever you want to go after you've given me the poster. - Harry. On it in crayon as well is written you have stolen my name return it to harrythehippo@gmail.com

If you can't make it out, it reads: Have lost my *lost kitten* poster. It was stuck to this pole about a week ago. Have you seen it? It it exactly the same size as A4 paper, is made of white paper and has a picture of a kitten and the words *lost kitten* on it. If you have my poster, meet me here on Sunday at 5.30pm. No photocopies. I can offer you a lift on my bike wherever you want to go after you've given me the poster. - Harry


The red lemonade girls have been poster spotting too. Jack and Marian, eh?

Someone must have done a good job then

I spotted this on the quays this morning:

Plaque on wall for McGonagle solicitors with a sticker above it reading Thanks To, then the engraved McGonagle Solicitors, and underneath it has in black marker the words who are deadly - total text - thanks to McGonagle Solicitors who are deadly

Always nice to get good feedback, eh?

Daffodil Day volunteers out on Dublin streets today



It's Daffodil Day! Like himself says - buy a daffodil today. You can also plant a daff online!

From their website's Did You Know:
  • One in three people in Ireland will be affected by cancer at some point in their life

  • Just one box of daffodils covers the cost of one night of nursing

  • The Irish Cancer Society provided over 5,700 nights of care to 1,600 families in 2008. This is a 10% increase on the number of nights and people cared for in 2007.

  • Over 25,000 new cases of cancer will be diagnosed this year, and there will be approximately 8,400 cancer deaths

  • By 2020, the number of people in Ireland being diagnosed with cancer is expected to rise by almost two-thirds.


    I went wandering again from O' Connell Street to work today to talk to some of the volunteers and buy some flowers. It was quite inspiring to see faces I remembered from last year as well as meet some new people.



    James Gilleran and Anna Dunne are back at the end of O' Connell Street. I stood watching for a while as people came over to get photos with him in the suit or greeted them saying "Great to see you back!" I walked over specifically to have a word. Lovely people, great ambassadors.



    Ann Murphy and Anna Dunne on Westmoreland Street have been selling daffodils for 18 years now. 18 years - 13 now in the same spot! Incredible commitment.



    Claire was outside the Bank of Ireland on College Green. It's her first year doing it.



    Here's Valerie Robinson, Ann Roberts and Jackie Byrne - Jackie who's been doing this for nine years now tells me that all her friends are roped in - Valerie and Ann being so for five years now.



    Lillian, Barbara and Daphne were outside of Trinity. Lillian is in her second year of volunteering while Barbara has been helping out on Daffodil Day for 12 years and Daphne for 10.



    Here's Gillian who is volunteering for the first time with Alison and Donna from the Irish Cancer Society. Alison told me it's been a hugely busy day this year with 480 volunteers out selling, with 244 of those being new volunteers - not counting the Transition Year students.



    Speaking of Transition year students, here's Eugene Kyne and Zack Lennon from Coláiste Mhuir out on Dame Street doing their bit.



    Finally I met Anna and Patricia on George's Street. This is Anna's second year and Patricia's first. They seemed in fine form this morning.

    In terms of what the support you give to the Society by helping them today:
    The funds raised during the event are used in these vital areas:
    • Patient care: Thanks to your support, around 1,600 families in Ireland will receive free care from a night nurse this year and 19 oncology liaison nurses in hospitals around the country will be on hand to give practical and emotional assistance to people with cancer.

    • Information: We produce some of the latest advice and support on cancer, and free information that can really help someone who's in the dark and feeling frightened.
    WELL DONE to every volunteer who went to raise money and awareness for the Irish Cancer Society this year, and to everyone who bought a daffodil or any of their products!

    The Irish Cancer Society's Cancer Information Service is available Monday to Thursday 9am to 7pm (5pm on a Friday) on Freefone 1800 200 700, while their email service is helpline@irishcancer.ie.

    Thursday, March 19, 2009

    Using simple social media tools to capture an event


    (This post is an update to an earlier post I did...)

    How could a cultural event, a charity or an organisation get extra free coverage for their event? Very simply it turns out.

    I worked/volunteered on this year's St Patrick's Festival parade. I carried a camera and a Nokia N95 and just used twitter and photos to try capture what I was looking at.

    Some of the Twitter reactions were

    These are great photos - makes me feel like I'm there with you all!!

    Thanks for those cool photos - looks excellent and no rain, who knew it could be like this? ;-))

    http://twitpic.com/26f7o - Love the accent!! Thanks for posting these pics...I always get a little homesick on this day :( ...

    Thanks for those pics Darragh, I'm there in spirit. Enjoy the remainder of the big day.
    Doesn't that sound like something you'd like to hear people saying about your event?

    The challenge is somehow, using text and images, to convey to someone what's going on from a different angle. While there's great TV coverage and press photographers will capture the spectacular shots, for me it's also about the experience of the people in crowds, the performers and the tourists, so I made an effort to talk to as many as I could yesterday.



    Imagine that recent twitter attempts like @MIMA2009 - the Meteor Irish Music Awards and RTE's @IrlTalentShow - All Ireland Talent Show had planned it out so they could do similar, properly? This sort of stuff isn't huge budget expense, it's using simple (free) tools to connect with and engage people in a rather cool way. Those two accounts could have been very very cool but weren't.

    Today FM's Ray Foley was twitpiccing like a mad yoke at last night's event which was great, except that because of his seat he looks like he was far back. Imagine someone was given press clearance to do it officially? It's something that event and marketing people need to wake up to - "Oh that looks like fun, I'll go to that when it's on again".

    No one is expecting perfection - which is not the same as professionalism anyway - but it is opening the event up to a larger audience and putting a human face/name behind it. That's why I'm really looking forward to the photos from Darren Greene and Hazel Coonagh who were wandering around the route with full access yesterday.

    It was brilliant too to see Denise - @stpatricksfest - tweeting and keeping people updated as well. We worked well together, me posting, she retweeting and it helped give people who weren't just following my twitter channel some flavour of the day.



    In short, what St Patrick's Festival did this year was, as far as I can see, unique, and their partnership with Pix.ie was something no amount of marketing and advertising through "conventional" channels could equal. There's a record there of how people enjoyed the day, what they saw and how it was received that they can go to their sponsors with and say "Here, this is what your money did." That's different. That's special.



    So how can you do that? Whatever your event or charity or organisation or campaign, how do you get people talking about what you do before, during and after the event?

    Here's a few suggestions:
    • Register a Twitter account. Start tweeting. Follow me - http://twitter.com/darraghdoyle and I'll tell people who you are. Not sure what Twitter is? Check out this video from Niall Harbison.

    • Talk to Pix.ie about creating a group. Here people can upload photos of your event, share what they've seen and you can direct people and sponsors towards it to see what's happening.

    • Get yourself a YouTube channel. For example, mine is here. You can see a wide spectrum of some of my interests and what I like to do. Look at the Performance Corporation's one - they keep a record of what they do that they can share with everyone.

    • Get onto Facebook and create an event page for a date specific event and a group page for an organisation. Here's what the Peacock did for Ages of the Moon. Ben & Jerry's Ireland have 789 people they can message about their Free Cone Day in April. Here's the Independent Youth Theatre group and an event page for their Cooped Up production.

    • Get a blog. Don't DARE tell me that a blog takes too much time and that you couldn't update it. Do you write press releases? Do you email people about what you do? Do you have to give your web designer copy for the website? All these can go on your blog.

      It doesn't have to be just written by a marketing person. Get anyone who knows what a blog is to get involved. That's what No Nonsense Insurance did.

      The 4DayMovie blog was done in 4 days. Seriously folks, it's easy to do with a little bit of creativity and time. A photo here, a video there, an interview, what's been said about you in the papers, what's happening - it's all there for the taking.

    • Do you need a Bebo and a MySpace just because everyone else has them? Perhaps. If you're going to use them though make sure you have the right resources in place to be able to deal with them - to respond to the questions, to interact with those who follow you and to keep them updated on what's going on. There's no point in having a channel if you're not going to use it and it doesn't give anything to those watching it.

    • Finally, talk to people! The names that spring to mind straight away for me are Niamh, who pretty much manages everything I do, Emily Tully on the PR side, Aisling Ryan on the event management side, Denise Rushe on Arts Management and the superlative Kathy Kinsella for volunteer coordination. Ronan Flynn and Cian McKenna are great designers to work with.

      You can connect with people on Twitter, on IGOpeople, LinkedIn and good old fashioned email.
    Ask for help and advice. People are there and happy to do what they can to help. If you don't take advantage, they'll be happy to oblige.

    Think about it - what do you want people saying about your event? What results do you want? Ask St Patrick's Festival who now can go with photos like these to their sponsors and say "This is what you were part of. You can be part of it again." That's worth something, isn't it?


    Photo by smugairle

    Irish charities - get your story featured on 4FM

    This is Michael Comyn and he presents the weekend show on 4FM - the radio station two floors above where I'm sitting now - which broadcasts to counties Dublin, Cork, Limerick, Galway and Clare.



    One of the interesting things he does is feature the work of an Irish charity every Sunday morning between 7.30am and 8.00am. He's very open to being contacted so if you'd like some coverage for your charity, drop Michael a line at michael@4fm.ie

    Great way to get some coverage for you!

    Wednesday, March 18, 2009

    Photos from the Dublin St Patrick's Day Parade 2009


    (EDIT: I've changed this post from the original to lose some stuff)

    I have finally uploaded many of my photos from yesterday to Pix.ie and have included some below. I spent much of the day tweeting and twitpiccing the parade while on the route interacting with people, answering queries and helping if and where I could. I had the camera with me and swapped between N95 and camera as necessary.



    I really need to thank three people in particular who were working on the Festival team and really helped me so much.

    • Catherine Egan with the Press Office was fantastic and obliging and really gets why online is so important in the promotion of an event.

    • Denise Rushe was an eternal font of knowledge, good humour and support and made my involvement this year that much easier

    • Kathy Kinsella is *the* volunteer coordinator in Ireland and it's been a pleasure to work with her again. Super organised and efficient, she understood what I was trying to do and let me get on with it. Super stuff indeed.
    The other people to thank are Marcus, Niamh, Will, Grannymar, Elly and Phil who all made the day that bit better and more fun. Also all the performers who posed for photos and put on such a great show!

    Anyway - I tried hard to cut this down to only a few photos - you'll see the rest here - so hope you enjoy:
























    With parade Grand Marshalls Cathriona Foley, Cork Camogie Captain, Henry Shefflin of Kilkenny and Angela Walsh, Cork Football Captain

    I'll have more to come. In the meantime check out FionnTime's AMAZING bird's eye pics over O' Connell Bridge - they're quite something!

    Flash mob dancing outside Dublin's Central Bank

    Can you spot Ellybabes, Niamho, Ian or me dancing outside of Central Bank on Monday afternoon last?



    It was brilliant fun and fair play to the Performance Corporation for organising it. Thanks also to Liana who was a wonderful dancing partner and instructor!

    Extreme Sheep LED art by the BaaaStuds

    Just look at this. Seriously. It's absolutely amazing. I want to know if it's real.

    We took to the hills of Wales armed to the teeth with sheep, LEDs and a camera, to create a huge amazing LED display.



    Yep, another ad, but wasn't it worth it?

    Tuesday, March 17, 2009

    Lá Fhéile Pádraig shona daoibh - Happy St Patrick's Day

    Today I am mostly doing


    (Recognise the scarf, CA?)

    and have watched the Grand Marshalls, Brian Dooher Tyrone Football Captain, Henry Shefflin, Kilkenny Hurling representative, Angela Walsh, Cork Football Captain and Cathriona Foley, Cork Camogie Captain being interviewed



    and am looking at performers like





    while waiting for the 2009 St Patrick's Day Parade in Dublin to start.

    So as you can imagine, blogging will be light. In the meantime, keep an eye on Twitter - You can see all tweets using the #SPF09 tag here - to give you an idea of what twitterers are talking about.

    I'll be uploading photos on the go there too - http://twitter.com/darraghdoyle

    I added this to Culch.ie a couple of days ago but in case you haven't seen it:



    Don't forget to upload any photos you have to the Pix.ie St Patrick's Festival Group. Yes, Marcus does pay me every time I mention them :-P

    Enjoy the day whatever you get up to, wherever you are!

    Friday, March 13, 2009

    The new look Facebook homepage

    Well, my Facebook homepage changed this afternoon and I assume everyone else's did too. What do you think of it?

    Sneak preview photos of the Spheres event this weekend

    Stu left me this link in a comment - tis handy like that, don't ya know! Some shots of the Strange Fruit people at the Spheres event.

    man in white perched on big white sphere supported by a tiny stick - kinda like a lollipop
    Photos from irishstu's Flickr stream

    photo shows a number of giant, inflatable spheres in different luminous colours with people on them

    photo shows a number of giant, inflatable spheres in different luminous colours with people on them

    This one IS a conspiracy theory

    This one came in via email. I know who yis are!

    MS paint note reading Operation sshhhh!! don't tell Darragh

    I didn't want to go anyway, so there!! :-P

    me aged seven in my communion suit looking sad

    Be part of something special in Dublin next Monday

    Do you remember I blogged about flash mob kissing in the Ilac Centre last year?

    people kissing in Dublin's Ilac Centre

    Well, the people behind that - Ireland's Performance Corporation - are looking for participants for what they're calling Theatrical Expression as part of the St Patrick's Festival.

    Their Facebook Group Page is here.

    If you're available to be in Dublin's City Centre from 4 - 7pm on Monday March 16, all you need to do to get involved is to
    text YES, plus your name to 087 050 7840 or send an email to info@theperformancecorporation.com.


    You could be part of something as beautiful as this was.



    You never know, you may even get a snog out of it. (Snog not guaranteed!)

    This is not a conspiracy theory... apparently

    I got sent this randomly and unsolicited via Twitter today from someone called Joe. I haven't a clue what it's about either.



    There's more on his YouTube channel and the website. If anyone has any idea, can you let me know?

    Ah, my good friend Steve has pointed out it's part of the RTÉ Storyland project which starts next Monday. I see, I see...

    St Patrick's Festival in Dublin and more - the top events

    A tad late coming to this - or maybe exactly on time - here's my suggestions for things you can do in Dublin this festival weekend. Whatever you do, if you take photos, think of adding them to the Pix.ie official photo group.

    map of where things are happening in Dublin from St Patrick's Festival programme
    The PDF for the official programme can be downloaded here

    FRIDAY 13 - what will you do today?


    Photos with permission from St Patrick's Festival

    Tonight (and tomorrow) at 6,30pm and 8pm it's the free Spheres at Docklands event.

    The internationally renowned Strange Fruit from Melbourne, present seven performers perched on giant, illuminated orbs.

    You should note this is on the southside - see the map here - just off Pearse Street, as opposed to CHQ where events were held last year.



    The Funfair at Merrion Square starts at 6pm today (finishes at 11pm), Saturday to Monday 11am - 11pm and Tuesday 17 11am-9pm. This year among other things there's a 150-foot high Jubilee Wheel.


    SATURDAY 14 - tis fierce busy altogether!



    Year on year, people who have done the Denny Treasure Hunt have come back to City Hall and said "Wow, I never knew that was there!" - it's basically a set of clues to find around Dublin City Centre and in various cultural centres in order to complete the puzzle. Always great fun and ideal for a group.



    If running around is not your thing, how about some French Wine tasting on a tall ship in Dublin?

    The sailing ship Etoile de France arrives in Dublin on Friday, March 13 to Sir John Rogerson Quay. It has been more than 60 years since a merchant ship (tall ship) has unloaded its cargo in Dublin outside Dublin Port. That's taking place today (Friday)

    Sail lovers are welcome to come on board and visit the boat and/or taste the wine - admission fee €5 - on Friday 13 from 12pm until 4pm and Saturday 14th all day. It's free for under 15s and over 78s.






    Disney's Darby O' Gill and the Little People is showing in the Irish Film Institute at 5pm. Hard to believe this film is now 50 years old - that banshee scared the bejaysus out of me. The film is introduced by director Jim Sheridan.



    It's (obviously) not Dublin but Skyfest is in Waterford this year from 6.30pm.

    FUNKY SEOMRA DANCING

    The Funky Seomra is a dancing and chill-out event held monthly in the RDS Concert Hall. The St Patrick's event takes place from 8pm on Saturday and should continue until the wee hours. Tickets are €15. From the website:
    Participants of all ages fill the spacious dance floor or lounge on giant Budda Bags in the chill-out area of the stunning RDS concert hall. Funky, very danceable music from many corners of the globe make it irresistible to get your groove on.

    Funky Seomra cafe with The Happy Pear, salads, organic snacks and chocolate treats, smoothies and juices, specialist teas and a Chai Bar are some of the enticing aspects of the event.
    The Facebook event page is here. There's also more about it on Dublin.ie.


    SUNDAY 15 - have a day out



    The Big Day Out is happening down at Merrion Square. A free event from 12 noon to 6pm, there's a whole lot going on.

    Visual pavement art, puppets, street theatre, a movie zone, break-dancing - loads for everyone and great photo fodder. The full PDF of events is available here.



    The incredibly-voiced Lenneke Ruiten is sporano at a free concert in City Hall at noon on Sunday. She performs with Sarah Groser on bass violin and Malcolm Proud on harpsichord.

    They'll be performing Purcell, Handel and Couperin. No booking is required and you can read more on the Hugh Lane Gallery website.

    Finally the amazing Gardiner Street Gospel Choir are performing at the Gospel Mass in St. Francis Xavier Church at the top of Gardiner Street near the junction with Dorset Street at 19:30.


    TUESDAY MARCH 17 - a day for pixies




    So the parade starts up on Parnell Square at 12 noon and should be over by 14:30. Pix.ie will be busy that evening, that's for sure! If you haven't seen it, check out their competition - not that it needs to be linked to again of course :-P

    Then there's a big party up in the Guinness Storehouse for the Diageo St Patrick's Festival Party. Should be great fun for those going.

    RTÉ's Cór na Nóg is giving a free recital in the Shaw Room of the National Gallery at 4pm. A lovely chance to hear this young choir perform time-honoured melodies such as Dublin Saunter and I'll Tell Me Ma, Irish traditional airs including Trasna na dTonnta and lots more.


    I think that's enough to be getting on with. If you don't already, you should consider signing up to the DUBLIN EVENT GUIDE email - a free events email sent weekly by Joerg Steemuller that is always a great source of information about the free events happening in Dublin. Seriously, I don't know where he gets the time.

    To subscribe all you have to do is email dublineventguide[at]gmail[dot]com with the subject "Subscribe" and Joerg will take it from there.

    Have a great weekend, whatever you get up to!

    Thursday, March 12, 2009

    I'm not broody, but...

    picture of a baby's hands over my first finger. The difference in size is as you'd expect - big man hands and tiny baby fingers.

    I loved how small her hands were next to mine. Her tiny fingers, tinier fingernails.

    I loved the tiny details of her skin. Soft and malleable, waiting for her to grow into it.

    I loved how small her head was, the tiny features of her nose.

    I loved watching her sleep, the rise and fall of this tiny body, sleeping, dreaming, oblivious to the room, the world, nestled in my arms, comfortable.

    I loved that I wasn't afraid to hold her.

    She was the youngest baby I have ever met, born a mere eight days earlier, all six pounds, two ounces of her. As the others in the room chatted to her parents, I stared at the beautiful infant in my arms, the others perhaps not knowing that this was one of the only times I've ever held such a young human.

    I thought of all the things that could have happened and thankfully didn't before she was both and about all the good things that may happen to her in her life and hopefully will.

    She woke, her tiny arms and legs moving as she did so, her world expanding into sounds, shaped and colours. Her tiny eyes opened, her mouth smiled and she drifted back off for another few minutes. I was fascinated. New life fascinates me.

    I held her in my arms, tenderly. Not broodily, but with more care, attention and love than I've felt in a long long time.

    Picture of me with a tiny baby sleeping in my arms

    Tuesday, March 10, 2009

    Some details about the 2009 Meteor Awards

    Have you voted yet? Have you?

    I'm nomming (in order of category)

    and I can't judge best live performance because I wasn't at any of them and sure best pop will go to The Script. The Coronas, pop, really?

    In further news, I've just received (and edited for you) a letter from the PR company to tell me:
    The 2009 Meteor Ireland Music Awards will take place at the Simmonscourt Pavillion in the RDS on St. Patrick’s Day 2009. The awards will be broadcast on Wednesday March 18th on RTE2.

    The star-studded music spectacular,will be hosted by Amanda Byram.

    The glamour event of the year will see the cream of the crop turn out in force. The breathtaking line up for the night will see James Morrison, Duke Special, Elbow, Boyzone, The Blizzards, Stereophonics, Imelda May, and Enrique Iglesias take to the limelight and entertain like never before.

    This year will also see a long awaited special collaboration from Sharon Shannon and Mundy. Sharon Shannon will also be presented with The Life Time Achievement Award for her contribution to Irish music.

    Fr. Shay Cullen from the Preda foundation will be presented with the 2009 Humanitarian Award for his phenomenal work in the Philippines. The award will be accompanied by a €100,000 donation to aid the continuation of his life changing work.
    I see also that Niall Stokes from Hot Press is due to get the Industry award.

    Should be a good night. I was there last year. Mr Tayto was the biggest celebrity I met... until I met Rick O Shea of course. Jesus, a year already...



    G'wan and vote, why don't ya?

    Win an online campaign worth €25K with Pigsback.com



    That Curly is a clever piggy. Not only is he now Guaranteed Irish, he's also offering one Irish brand a €25K campaign, throwing the full reach and expertise of Pigsback.com behind it. And here's me pimping it.

    In-joke aside, this is a big chance for charities, events, start-ups to get their brand out there for free with the resources of a marketing company operating in the Irish market since 2000.

    Basically Pigsback is a loyalty site with offers and competitions for the people who sign up to the site who are rewarded for giving details and opting to get targeted newsletters and surveys based on their location interests. It means they have unparalleled "targeting based on who-you-are" capability.

    Given the fact they boast an active Irish member base of almost 300,000 with a comprehensive email and statistics package coupled with the expertise of working with most of the country's top brands, the potential of a well thought out integrated campaign seems a no-brainer to anyone with limited or no funding. Just imagine your site or logo promoted like the below:



    Given the volume of emails that Pigsback send any brand getting (pardon the pun) onto the site is sure to get attention and awareness, if not interaction. It is, as I said, a great opportunity for some company to get targeted emails sent on their behalf by a company that knows what it's doing. I can certainly think of a few things I'd be planning.

    One of the things Pigsback has always operated on - in its Empathy Marketing principles - is trust and this is is possibly the most enticing part of the offer. It would be fair to say that Pigsback members trust Curly and all he delivers. This seems as important now as when I worked there

    The terms and conditions include an entry of not more than 250 words, you must be an Irish manufactured brand or supplied service to be eligible and you will not have run a campaign on Pigsback.com before. You should check this out before March 31, 2009.

    Good luck - hope you do well!

    Monday, March 09, 2009

    Five reasons I volunteer with St Patrick's Festival - a gallery

    This may not be 100% accurate but I'm fairly sure that the 2009 St Patrick's Festival will be the seventh time I've volunteered with it. From my first year of just walking in the Parade way back in 2000 to this week, it's something I look forward to every year and it's just been a case of me living in London that I missed one year and in hospital the other.

    So, why do it? Why not spend the time in the pub, out with friends or away out of Dublin altogether for an event that draws thousands of people year on year? Well...

    5. Seeing it up close



    The incredible amount of work and detail that goes into each event at the festival is quite staggering and by volunteering, you're not only getting to help out on that but to see things up close.



    Whether it's the parade set-up, the effort people go to dress up and enjoy the Treasure Hunt or just the sheer delight people have in creating something colourful to amuse and entertain, the chance to see all this up close, not behind barriers or in the midst of crowds is important and helps set the full picture.



    It's how too drawings like the below turn into the displays underneath







    4. The events themselves

    I'll stick this into another post but it's been great to see some of the events that have happened over the last few years. There was the year we were in the middle of the Liffey setting up for Skyfest and the giant inflatable Polish puppets. There was the rain from last year's event down at the Docklands. There was the speed dating as Gaeilge.

    There was also the time the Andalucian shepherds I was looking after lassoed Mary McAleese in the Grandstand while her Aide de Camp looked daggers at me. Very good memories. Very funny.



    My personal favourite? The Denny Treasure Hunt that people dress up to participate in. Every year people come back saying how much fun it was and how they've learned something new about Dublin. Great event altogther.

    3. The photos

    Head on over to Pix.ie to see the thousands of photos about the Festival, the parade and all the people involved. If it's true that part of the soul is taken away by a photograph, mine has evaporated after last year's festivities. As much as I like seeing them, I am particularly fond of some of the photos I managed to grab last year myself.











    2. The people

    I almost put this first but really it and no. 1 are as important to me. I'm always so entertained by the thousands of people who voluntarily come to participate, to give their time, creativity and enthusiasm to something that entertains so many others. The amount of work that is going on in school halls, warehouses and garden sheds all over the country shouldn't be under-estimated. Why do they do it? For the love of it!

























    1. The friends I make

    I've made a wide group of friends through volunteering at different events. We stay in touch, see each other at different festivals, meet up for pints and look forward to seeing each other again. From all different countries and places, we share a lot of the work, the laughter and the shared experience of working for Ireland's premier festival.

    Some of course are only for the duration of the festival and then fade away despite best intentions and some are there to stay. Each encounter is special in its way and makes the memories all the better.







    You can find out more information about volunteering with St Patrick's Festival here. The lovely Kathy would be more than happy to help you with any queries you may have. See you there!

    Friday, March 06, 2009

    Tim Burton's Vincent, his first stop motion film, made in 1982



    I love Vincent Price's voice in this.

    Vincent Malloy is seven years old
    He’s always polite and he does what he’s told
    For a boy his age, he’s considerate and nice
    But he wants to be just like Vincent Price.

    He doesn’t mind living with his sister, dog and cats
    Though he’d rather share a home with spiders and bats.

    There he could reflect on the horrors he’s invented
    And wander dark hallways, alone and tormented.

    Vincent is nice when his aunt comes to see him
    But imagines dipping her in wax for his wax museum

    He likes to experiment on his dog Abercrombie
    In the hopes of creating a horrible zombie,
    So he and his horrible zombie dog
    Could go searching for victims in the London fog,

    His thoughts, though, aren’t only of ghoulish crimes
    He likes to paint and read to pass some of the times.
    While other kids read books like Go, Jane, Go!
    Vincent’s favourite author is Edgar Allen Poe

    One night, while reading a gruesome tale
    He read a passage that made him turn pale
    Such horrible news he could not survive
    For his beautiful wife had been buried alive!

    He dug out her grave to make sure she was dead
    Unaware that her grave was his mother’s flower bed
    His mother sent Vincent off to his room
    He knew he’d been banished to the tower of doom
    Where he was sentenced to spend the rest of his life
    Alone with the portrait of his beautiful wife

    While alone and insane encased in his tomb
    Vincent’s mother burst suddenly into the room
    She said: “If you want to, you can go out and play
    It’s sunny outside, and a beautiful day”

    Vincent tried to talk, but he just couldn’t speak
    The years of isolation had made him quite weak
    So he took out some paper and scrawled with a pen:
    "I am possessed by this house, and can never leave it again"

    His mother said: "You’re not possessed, and you’re not almost dead
    These games that you play are all in your head
    You’re not Vincent Price, you’re Vincent Malloy
    You’re not tormented or insane, you’re just a young boy.
    You’re seven years old and you are my son
    I want you to get outside and have some real fun."

    Her anger now spent, she walked out through the hall
    And while Vincent backed slowly against the wall
    The room started to swell, to shiver and creak
    His horrid insanity had reached its peak

    He saw Abercrombie, his zombie slave
    And heard his wife call from beyond the grave
    She spoke from her coffin and made ghoulish demands
    While, through cracking walls, reached skeleton hands

    Every horror in his life that had crept through his dreams
    Swept his mad laughter to terrified screams!
    To escape the madness, he reached for the door
    But fell limp and lifeless down on the floor

    His voice was soft and very slow
    As he quoted The Raven from Edgar Allen Poe:

    “and my soul from out that shadow
    that lies floating on the floor
    shall be lifted?
    Nevermore…”

    National Lottie wins, Off Her Rocker ends and the whole of the moon

    It's one of those days I guess. Shortly after I read that the wonderfully talented Lottie has won February's Blog Post of the Month for her post on Misadventures in Life and Fashion, I go to read that my inspirational friend Nay is finishing the Off Her Rocker Blog over at Hot Press and heading off for new adventures and, hopefully, to pastures green.

    I first met Nay in an official capacity where she, as Hot Press photographer, was working at the Bright New Sounds gig - wow, nearly a year ago! Impressed by her ownership of the event and what she needed to get done and how (basically just point me in the direction and let me get on with it) she stuck in my head as someone I'd like to know.

    I started reading the Off Her Rocker blog. I know virtually nothing about Irish music past what's already on my iPod so the amount of people, gigs, albums and art that I found out there was such a revelation. Every post was well thought out, there was no just "throwing it up there" and she had such a genuine interest and passion for the music, it practically shone from it. It became a regular destination.

    I was lucky enough to meet her then later in the year and we've since become good friends. I can understand completely how - and why - she feels she has to stop - pressure, time (especially raising two small children), criticism, lack of support, lack of resource - all things that have such a draining effect. While I'm sorry to see her go because of the big gap she will leave, I'm glad she's leaving to try something new, exciting and hopefully more fulfilling.

    I trust too that the big space she leaves will help people - and indeed Hot Press themselves - see what a need there is for people to support the Irish music industry both online and offline - it's why events like the Road Records benefit is happening - and why other music bloggers who give people coverage/priase/feedback/a break - Nialler9, Guess List, KilkennyMusic.com, Drop-d, State.ie, Swear I'm not Paul, MP3 Hugger, Ragged Words, Nick Thinks, On the Record and Analogue to name but a few that I have found through my wanders from Off Her Rocker and more - are so important to keeping us up to date with what's going on.

    From the amount of musicians I have spoken to, every review, every interview, ever photo and every piece of promotion all helps and is appreciated. Those who know how can really help those who don't, but want to learn. Nay was someone who lived and breathed that. She still is.

    It's been interesting to see the reaction to some blogs ending. I'll miss blogs like Sinéad's, Una's and The Chancer but look forward to finding new ones too and catching up with the people that I don't get to read often enough. Blogging is alive and well and I can only thank all those who have contributed to my first, quite eventful year at it, but who, for their own great reasons, have decided enough is enough. It must be a hard thing to do. Fair play to yis.

    As for the rest of us, sure all we can do is keep on truckin. Nay, this one is for you - shot at the Tuesday's Child gig in Vicar Street on February 6. You have no idea how difficult it was for me not to sing along and ruin the video ;-)

    Thursday, March 05, 2009

    €9.4 million and 2,000 bees - sure that's nonsense!

    I got sent this by Kerry from Red Rage Films - the people behind the Meteor ads I posted yesterday. Excellent stuff altogether for the lads over at No Nonsense Car Insurance.

    Stay with it to the end, trust me.



    You can see the latest No Nonsense TV ads over on their blog. "Oh the evil gypsy curse, gammy leg and the twisty eyes and she stares at you through the..."

    Normal, non commercial posting may resume shortly. Busy in work, don't ya know!

    Wednesday, March 04, 2009

    New Meteor Mobile Broadband To Go ads starring Chris O' Dowd

    I was at the launch of the new Meteor Mobile Broadband To Go service this afternoon. I've been on the trial myself for the last four months but was there today following a tweet from Damien and an email from their PR company inviting me along.

    I'll post more about the service later but for now, the new Meteor ads starring The IT Crowd star Chris O' Dowd.



    Tuesday, March 03, 2009

    Lost friendship, rivalry and bourbon: Ages of the Moon

    Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, OKAY!!
    Okay so maybe it's a guy thing, but do you remember your first proper best friend? I don't mean someone you just knew and played with in school, I mean the friend you had that you were convinced you'd be best friends forever. You went to the cinema, you went together to matches, you went to parties and nights out, on holidays and for quiet contemplative pints in the pub.

    You laughed with them, applauded their triumphs, shared their gains as they did with you. You were unstoppable together, a regular Holmes and Watson, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Asterix and Obelix, Batman and Robin, Bill and Ted, Dastardly and Muttley, Ernie and Bert, Spongebob and Patrick. You were known as friends, you were best friends - everyone could see and admire it.

    It wasn't just friendship, it was brothers. You admired each other, encouraged each other and your life was better because they were in it. And you grew older together, heading towards adult and all that involves and you meet each other's partners, you promise to be each other's best men and you may even dance at each other's weddings.

    Of course there's arguments. There always is. Misunderstandings, slights, slaggings. Not exactly nice but friendship is also about accepting, ignoring, just going with things and putting the grudges, the judging and the "sins" out of your head. It's knowing someone's faults but loving them anyway for it.

    And then something happens. It may be a small thing, it may be a big thing, it may be nothing at all, but the friendship is paused. A new friend or circle is introduced, one that takes up some of the connection time. One of you moves away or gets a shiny new job or attentive partner or start a new chapter in your life. Maybe it's just you forget a birthday or an appointment. You fall out of touch.

    It's not a malevolent or vindictive choice - it may not even be a choice. You don't 'do' arguments, you just accept and move on, right? This just falls into one of those things that you keep on meaning to do, but keep on putting it off until you have the time that it needs, the time it deserves.

    The longer it goes on the more awkward it is to just pick up the phone or send a text or an email, but sure you know that they know you're thinking about them and if they needed you they knew where you are and sure you can always pick up where you left off, right? That's what friendship is, isn't it?

    But as much as it's all well and good there's a bit of bitterness there. Your friend wasn't there for important things. Where before you could divide and conquer the problem, you had to face this one on your own. You didn't need them really, you could have fun without them!

    As much as you knew it wasn't anyone's fault the friendship had died, you justify it within by thinking - well if only they'd put in more effort, if they were as much into it as you were. It takes two.

    And then you meet up again after time has passed. One of you calls or writes or emails and it's on again. The same opportunity to catch up, to rekindle the fire of friendship, to sit and have a drink and talk. You meet but suddenly, despite the build up, the excitement, the potential to regain what was lost you realise that it's not the same. Every difference that existed between you is magnified, everything you may not have liked but accepted unconditionally becomes an issue.

    They're not big matters but they serve to mask or overwhelm the absolute hurt you really feel about their absence as you realise just how much you missed them, how much time you've lost and how ashamed you are for letting it get this far.

    So you try talking. Let's talk like we did in the old days, eh? You know when you could sit and talk for hours about anything at all and you'd still have fun, still be interested, still enjoy it. But now you really have nothing to talk about. The words won't come and the ones you choose are just masking the fact that what you had is gone and you both know it. You'll talk about anything so you won't be talking about nothing or even worse, about what is now gone between you. Things are different now and that's not good.

    That is what Sam Shepherd's Ages of the Moon made me think about last night.

    shot of programme flier for AGES OF THE MOON by Sam Shepard at the Peacock Theatre, Dublin. Photo shows two people looking at the camera - Sean McGinley and Stephen Rea.

    Stephen Rea (Ames) and Sean McGinley (Byron) play with considerable skill two friends reunited after a long time apart. Time was they were great friends. Time was they were the Lone Ranger and Tonto, facing the wild west together after a chance encounter on a highway in 1962.

    It's now 2007 and Ames has made a mistake. He's messed up his personal life and with nowhere else to turn has run away from it all. Alone with just nature and thoughts he replays the past, finds no escape or resolution and it comes to a drunken phone call to Byron which results in their reunion.
    "That's why I'm here, some sort of moral support or something... Long story short, you got yourself into some doggy do do, Mr Frisky." - Byron


    It takes a lot of skill for two actors to sit alone on a stage with a minimum of props, a lot of dialogue and a script that demands both silence and awkwardness to be as big a part as the action that follows. The freedom that Jimmy Fay as director gives each actor makes what happens all the more watchable and enthralling.

    No dramatic gun-toting, action filled piece this, the true skill of Shepard is the response it provokes in the watcher of this long, slow, pregnant-pause-filled confession of "God I missed you" between two men. "We're not exactly spring colts" admits Byron, the change between them unspoken but increasingly apparent. "Used to be we could talk about anything, the two of us, years ago. There wasn't all this judging" says Ames.

    A line about "brimming with guilt and remorse, flooded with regret" spoke more strongly to me than any of the other lines.

    Sean McGinley and Stephen Rea stare at the camera.

    This play is hard to define. It's not a theatrical "experience", it's not a life changing event, it's not actually all that serious.

    Perhaps a more skilful critic could draw themes of contemplation, self-realisation and nobility, which all exist in their own place, but overall it's the decay of people, of opportunity to connect and of time that I left the theatre with. Is it entertaining? I prefer the best of the word 'interesting' to describe it.
    "You called me". "I appreciate that" "You'd do the same for me?" "I would. Of course I would!" "Of course I'd never get myself into a jam like this." "WHAT?!"
    Whatever Ages of the Moon is not is eclipsed by the opportunity to see two extremely talented and full-of-presence actors push this script and the thoughts of the playwright into your brain, to watch them in an intimate setting and see just how well chosen they are for the roles and how skilfully Shepard has woven this tale around them.

    McGinley and Rea are believable - they could well be these two old men trying to recapture youth, slagging and bettering each other, playing to their roles while all the while circling the fact that god damn it, they like and missed each other. Though set in America this could be a typical Irish-or-anywhere story, a warning for friends and a memory of old friendships.

    McGinley is seated as Rea stands up, open mouthed, hands on crotch in a still from the play

    If you do see this, be prepared for the surprising and unexpected emotions brought about by McGinley's soliloquy on recent events in his character's life.

    The contrast portrayed here between his thus far steady and quiet mannered presence (compared to Rea's manic and attention seeking one) and the tender, romantic eloquence in which he describes his own despondency, his journey back to his friend, his shock at seeing "the grey, the shoulders stooped, the eyes sunken deep inside the ragged fleshy masks" is so stark, so piteous that just those few simple lines and the incredible story it contains makes the slow build up worth it. Gone is the bitterness, the disputes, the grudges and petty jealousies.

    This is what friendship should be about. Connection. Presence. Sharing. Just people, people on a planet with one sun and one big, old moon.

    photo shows silhouette of man in an open doorway of a dark room overlooking a scenic, cloud filled landscape with the text to one side reading Funny isn't it, I never could've imagined I'd be out here like this. Some strange state. How's you wind up out here anyway? Middle of some night - some moon - Where the hell are we supposed to be?

    Ages of the Moon is on in the Peacock Theatre, Dublin 1 until April 4 - you'll find more information here. Show time is 8pm and tickets are €22 or €18 for Saturday Matinees. There's a sign language interpreted performance on Saturday 21 March 2.30pm and an excellent opportunity to see both actors in conversation on Thursday 26 March after the show.

    A big thank you to David at the Abbey for arranging the tickets and to Colm Hogan for the use of the photos.