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A Different View

Ice bucket challenge – an even bigger water scandal

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David and Conor Fitzgerald of the Fitzgerald family with two 'Marilyn Monroes', preparing for the annual Wedding Fayre at Fitzgeralds Woodlands House Hotel in Adare, Co Limerick, this Sunday, from 4-7pm.

A Different View with Dave O’Connell

Now that the year is well behind us, it’s safe to admit that the most annoying, infuriating and downright exasperating aspect of 2014 wasn’t the economy, water charges or even, God help us, Garth Brooks doing a Mayo at Croke Park – as in, failing to perform on the big day.

No, it was the Ice Bucket Challenge.

Yes, it was for the Irish Motor Neurone Disease Association – an excellent cause, richly deserving of all of the support we can afford to give it – and it resulted in an unplanned bonanza for a worthy charity.

But the downside was that you couldn’t open Facebook or YouTube without some other clown dousing themselves in buckets of what was supposed to be icy water and then challenging three others to repeat the dose.

I have to say that – to the best of my knowledge – I wasn’t nominated and if I was, I wouldn’t have done it anyway.

Because ice is something you put into drinks or avoid on the roads in winter time – it’s not something you lorry down your back from a bucket.

This isn’t meanness – I’ve given money to the IMNDA on many occasions and I know they provided wonderful support to two people I know who lost their lives to MND, RTE’s Colm Murray and Westmeath TD Nicky McFadden.

But it was this never-ending spectacle of people standing in their old clothes waiting for someone to give them a semblance of what Guantanamo detainees experience with water-boarding.

One after another they stood there, as though they were Padraig Pearse in Kilmainham Jail waiting to be shot. Behind them one or more of the kids got up on the garden bench and lifted the biggest saucepan of water into the air to rain down on daddy like a tsunami.

Strangely – for something called the Ice Bucket Challenge – there seemed, for the most part, to be an inexplicable absence of ice.

Most of the water looked lukewarm at worst and while pouring water over your head in anything other than a shower carries with it a certain degree of discomfort, this often seemed to be little more than a quick wash with your old clothes on.

And yet you had these volunteers bleating on about their experience as though they had fallen through a crevice on the polar ice cap, when in reality most of them had seen more ice in their last gin and tonic.

It’s been a tough year for charities on many fronts of course, so the fact that the IMNDA made somewhere north of €400,000 out of this is the upside of it all.

After the damage that the Central Remedial Clinic and Rehab did for fundraisers generally, you’d find it hard to begrudge any of these worthy organisations a few quid – but as we’re on it, I’ve no time for chuggers either.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Connacht Tribune

If you don’t know who you are, the door staff have no chance

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Dave O'Connell

A Different View with Dave O’Connell

The only time in your life that you should ever utter the words: “Do you know who I am?” are if you’ve just had a bang on the head or you are unfortunately suffering from dementia.

Because, otherwise, the phrase ‘do you know who I am’ only serves to make things a whole lot worse.

Normally, the phrase is unleashed towards late night door staff on a wave of alcohol – and never once in the history of time has it produced the result the utterer had intended.

The doorman may well know who you are which is often the very reason you’re not getting into the place in the first instance – or if he doesn’t know who you are, he won’t be unduly influenced when he does, unless you’re a famous movie star or his long-lost cousin.

‘Do you know where I am?’ might often be closer to the phrase you’re looking for, because that would serve you well when you’re looking for a taxi.

‘Do you know who I am?’ is a threatening phrase that in truth wouldn’t frighten the cat. But if you’re anxious to dig the hole a few shovels deeper, you should follow up with ‘I’d like to speak to your manager.’

Managers can be elusive at the best of times, but they’re normally rarer than hen’s teeth when it comes to the small hours of the morning – and even if they’re there, they are most likely watching proceedings on CCTV…just so they know who you are, in case you yourself can’t remember.

‘I’d like to speak to your manager’ suggests that you and he or she are from the one social sphere which is several strata north of the one occupied by door staff.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

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Connacht Tribune

Eurovision is just a giant party that could never cause offence

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Dave O'Connell
Dave O'Connell

A Different View with Dave O’Connell

As it turned out, we were much closer to a Eurovision win than we could ever have imagined – not Ireland, of course, because we’ve now mastered the art of just sending cannon fodder to be blown out in the semi-final.

No, this was just two of us – myself and our eldest – who were lucky enough to be at Anfield for the Reds’ recent win over Brentford, where positioned in the seat right in front of us were four happy lads from Finland.

One of them, we now know, was Käärijä, the singer of the catchiest song at Eurovision, Cha Cha Cha.

But just a week before 7,000 people sung his catchphrase at the Eurovision Arena, he and two his mates – accompanied by an older bloke who had to be either his dad or from the national broadcaster – sat anonymously in the same corner of the lower level of Anfield’s Main Stand.

He was utterly unknown to us as well of course, and the only thing that saw him stand out was his green nail varnish. Live and let live, of course, but it still ensures that you make an impression even if it looks like you were just very late for St Patrick’s Day.

Käärijä may well be Liverpool’s greatest Scandinavian fan, although the bar for that is set fairly high, given that they invade the city in greater numbers every two weeks than the Vikings did just once during the first millennium.

Equally, he may not be a football fan at all – although, as the rest of the week proved, he sure loves a crowd.

Positioned as we were in the corner of the Main Stand, the next section to us, around the corner in the Anfield Road Stand – currently adding a top layer – was occupied by the visiting Brentford supporters.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App

Download the Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App to access to Galway’s best-selling newspaper.

Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

Or purchase the Digital Edition for PC, Mac or Laptop from Pagesuite  HERE.

Get the Connacht Tribune Live app
The Connacht Tribune Live app is the home of everything that is happening in Galway City and county. It’s completely FREE and features all the latest news, sport and information on what’s on in your area. Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

 

 

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Connacht Tribune

Tapping is contactless – but it’s soulless too

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Dave O'Connell
Dave O'Connell

A Different View with Dave O’Connell

Contactless payments reached a record €17.9 billion in Ireland last year – up by 31 per cent on 2021, as people came out from under their Covid shell and appear to have left their cash behind them.

Figures from the Banking & Payments Federation found that – despite the cost-of-living increases – the Irish public made three million contactless payments a day, worth an average of €53 million in the final quarter of 2022.

Given that there are 3.8 million people in Ireland over the age of 18, that means that almost every single one of us tapped the card every day last year.

And again, on the presumption that there are a few who still prefer peeling a fifty off a wad of notes, the true figure may be even higher, as we eschew actual money every time we go into a restaurant, bar or shop.

Then comes the monthly morning of reckoning when you open your statement – electronic of course because, like paper money, banks don’t deal in paper statements anymore either – and your guilty secrets unfurl like a rap sheet before your very eyes.

Five taps of a Friday night in the local, followed by a five-ounce burger meal on the way home.

And just why did you need a family-pack of crisps when a small bag would have done? Was all that beer and wine really for a party, or a night in just for one?

Cash provided plenty of dark corners to ignore your profligacy, but there are no hiding places in the contactless world.

Worse still, until that morning of reckoning arrives, you’ve no clue how much you’ve spent, and handing over the card doesn’t hurt half as much as parting with hard cash.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App

Download the Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App to access to Galway’s best-selling newspaper.

Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

Or purchase the Digital Edition for PC, Mac or Laptop from Pagesuite  HERE.

Get the Connacht Tribune Live app
The Connacht Tribune Live app is the home of everything that is happening in Galway City and county. It’s completely FREE and features all the latest news, sport and information on what’s on in your area. Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

 

 

 

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