Nov 17 2008

links for 2008-11-17

Published by Fence under Clickies

Tags: autumninternationals08, childrens, cute, Guillermo del Toro, Ireland V New Zealand, Liam Toland, Luke Fitzgerald, Margo Lanagan, Paul O'Connell, pop culture, rugby, Tender Morsels, Tómas O'Leary

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Nov 14 2008

links for 2008-11-14

Published by Fence under Clickies

Tags: America - Proposition 8, autumninternationals08, Brian O'Driscoll, copyright, Doug Howlett, gay rights, haka, Hannah Jones, health, Ireland V New Zealand, library stuff, marriage, Munster V New Zealand, oclc, open source, right to die, rugby

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Nov 13 2008

links for 2008-11-13

Published by Fence under Clickies

Tags: body image, David Simon, fashion, feminism, Homicide: a year on the killing streets, Ireland V New Zealand, Lost, nonfiction, rugby, vidjo, Waaaaalllllt

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Nov 12 2008

links for 2008-11-12

Published by Fence under Clickies

Tags: autumninternationals08, Croke Park, discussion, feminism, Graham Henry, Ireland V New Zealand, Metafilter, rape, rape as a weapon of war, rugby, Stephen Lewis, Tómas O'Leary, violence, War

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Jun 17 2006

You can go to the end of time, the last World Cup in the history of mankind, and the All-Blacks will be favourites for it

Published by Fence under Sport

So I got out of bed with surprising ease this morning. Dressed in my Irish top I almost poisoned myself with sour milk, but spotted that there was something wrong with the tea and poured it down the sink. And headed off round the corner to The Woolshed Baa and Grill[1]

Within 30 minutes we were 14 nil down. But the heads didn’t drop and with a wonderful try from Paul O’Connell Ireland started to eat back into the lead. And then another from Jerry Flannery before half time. Which came at an unfortunate time for Ireland as they were really starting to get into a rhythm.

But a first victory was not to happen. And with the rain pouring down there were numerous errors from both teams. The big difference between the two was clearly the scrum, and Ireland came off worse there.

So once more it is the plucky Irish, who didn’t win. But this test was still a great achievement. Afterall, traditionally we do well in our first tests against the AB, only to be slaughtered in the second one. And the team didn’t collapse in the final 15/20 minutes as they did in the previous match. Next week we play Australia who were more than comfortable winners against England.

When I got home from the pub there was, of course, nothing on the telly. But I did get distracted by the trooping of the colours for the Queen of England’s 80th birthday. Not her real one mind, but her official one. And, my got, what a load of shite it is. Can anyone explain why they still were those silly hats?

Tradition, I know. But come on. Does all that purposeless pomp impress anyone?

Hmm, almost two, time to go watch the football.

Linknotes:
  1. Aussies are so witty, aren’t they?
Tags: Ireland V New Zealand, Jerry Flannery, Paul O'Connell, rugby

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Jun 14 2006

Fixity of Tenure, Freedom to Sell and Fair Rent

Published by Fence under Current Affairs, Irishify, Musing

Yesterday, at lunch I walked by An Roinn Iompair and spotted a very sorry looking tricolour; looking like it had been half blown off the flagpole a few days earlier and not been touched.

It wasn’t until much later, when I was on my way home and spotted the flag outside the court in exactly the same state that it dawned on me. They were simply at half mast, but because there was very little wind they were just hanging there, not blowing.

You’d think I would have realised it when I heard that Charlie Haughey had died. But no, obviously the brain wasn’t in gear yesterday.

But Haughey… I dunno. He was pretty much the embodiment of the cute hoor, who finally got caught out with the tribunals, but never really paid the price due to illness.

For those of you interested Crooked Timber have an interesting piece on The Boss, for those of you who couldn’t care less, we’ll move on.
[EDIT Although even if you aren't all that bothered you should still check out Auds post on Charlie and what he meant to a certain section/generation of Irish people. Is it a good thing, or a bad thing, d'you think, that we don't look up to people like that anymore. We're all just so cynical because the politicians have made us that way with their lies and corruption, so we are correct not to idealise them. But at the same time, I do believe there is something in people's nature that makes them want to believe.]

To the trouble Down Under, with Ireland’s rugby players boycotting a certain Indo journalist, leading to a mass exodus by the other media-heads[1] Supposedly this article by Dave Kelly upset some of the players, and they decided they wouldn’t talk to him. Which meant that he was forced to leave the press conferance. And in solidarity the rest of the print and photographic meeja followed suit. One out, all out, as Gerry Thornley in the Irish Times puts it.

Bloody stirring meeja, eh ;)

Course the very fact that the players now have no media coverage will mean that the press’s side will be reported, and theirs won’t. Maybe it is a tactic to foster unity within the squad, The team agin the world. Or maybe it is just a sense that they were hard done by in that article. Or maybe their upset over losing the first test has made other minor issues into large ones. All of the players interviewed since the first test match have described how they wanted to win more than anything, and are “gutted” because it was stupid errors that threw the victory away.

If they do manage an historic win next Saturday, what’s the bets all this is forgotten.

Linknotes:
  1. are they boycotting the boycotters?
Tags: boycott, Charlie Haughey, cute hoor, Ireland V New Zealand, Irish politics, meeja, RIP, rugby, The Boss

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Jun 12 2006

Hands of blue

Published by Fence under Sport, TV

In the past 30 minutes I have managed to spill water down my top and stick a wall staple-type-thing in my finger. I wonder what the third will be?

Still, can’t complain as the good weather has stayed longer than expected. Well sorta. It isn’t as warm as it has been, and there is a bit of a wind, but the sun is shining, and it hasn’t rained, so it’s all good.

I’m not going to mention the World Cup till the group stages are over, then I’ll give my impressions of the games I’ve watched, but isn’t it annoying that we aren’t in it?[1] In other sporting news, I did manage to get out of bed in time to listen to Ireland play New Zealand[2] but I think this Sat I’ll have to get up a little earlier and actually head to the pub to watch it. The radio is okay, but you really have no idea what is going on, especially when the commentator can’t talk fact enough to keep up with the action, or describes people passing the ball backwards, knocking on, and being turned over as losing the ball. I mean, get a different term.

Almost missed Bones last night, totally forgot it was on. Luckily Grey’s Anatomy started with a double episode last night and so I was just flicking around when the teaser of Bones ended and was able to watch most of it. Even luckier considering that for once this seems like an arcy episode. Does this mean we are near the end of the series?

Linknotes:
  1. obviously we being Ireland, and all you furriners must be missing us too
  2. BASTARDS!
Tags: 2006WorldCup, Ireland V New Zealand, oops, rugby

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