Thursday, January 29, 2026
Monday, January 26, 2026
Stephen's Green Shopping Centre this Christmas
A photo I snapped, forgot about, and then discovered weeks later. I have it as the backdrop of my computer now!
Monday, January 19, 2026
A Time to Mourn, Again
Once again, this blog is going to go into mourning as a good friend (who has been kind enough to regularly read it) has had a close relative pass away.
The blog colours will go to black and I'll suspend blogging a while. It seems appropriate.
Please pray for the loss of a father and the comfort of the bereaved.
Sacred Heart of Jesus and Immaculate Heart of Mary, be with them in their hour of need.
Thursday, January 15, 2026
Thursday, January 8, 2026
When the Christmas Tree Comes Down
I find this time of year very melancholy. Years ago I wrote a two-verse poem trying to capture this melancholy, but I can only find one verse now:
The time is past for tinselThe holly’s out of date
The clockwork Santa’s lost the will
To celebrate.
The workday world is rousing;
It hates a paper crown.
What’s left of the carousing
When the Christmas tree comes down?
Wednesday, January 7, 2026
The Embarrasing Right-Wing Old Dude Archetype in Comedy
Have you ever noticed how prominent this is, especially in British comedy?
Alf Garnett. Alan Partridge. David Brent. Chris Finch (in the same show). Rigsby in Rising Damp. Bail Fawlty ("if they don't like making cars, why don't they get themselves another bloody job designing cathedrals or composing violin concertos?"). Mr. Mackay in Porridge.
From about the 1970s onwards, nearly every comedy "villain" in British situation comedy is conservative or right-wing. I'm sure I could go on, but I don't have time.
Tuesday, January 6, 2026
That's Just Completely Gratuitous, That Is
I was re-reading my diary from 2016 when I came across this section:
I've just been watching scenes from Some Kind of Monster [a documentary about the band Metallica], and the scene where Kirk Hammett plays a special song he wrote in driving school. It reminds me of other moments where something completely unnecessary happened, and filled me with gladness.
Like the way the teachers in my school did a Line Dance on one day before the holidays once.
Or the time my father bought me and my brother all those cakes and biscuits before the first day of the 1994 World Cup, that he knew we were looking forward to so much.
Or the time my aunt put out a barrell that said "Fáilte" when me, my brother, and my motherwere arriving at the farm.
Or the time J----- B----- and J--- H----- both told me to 'wrap up warm' before I was going to America.
Or the time my wife arranged for me to get a helium balloon on my birthday.
Or the time, on one of the British channels, there was a wolf's howl after the close-down on a night they had been showing horror films.
The latter happened probably forty years ago-- back when TV stations still closed down for the night. I still think about it regularly.
Happy Feast of the Epiphany!
I happened upon this picture yesterday. It's actually me going to the library Christmas party last year. (The wife of the university's deputy President came up to me and said I won the competition for most Christmassy, or something like that.) Looking at it now, I think I resemble some kind of festive Che Guevara.
Anyway, Happy Epiphany, Three Kings, etc. The library took down all its Christmas decorations yesterday-- rather ironic, considering all the talk of cultural sensitivity, given that today is such a big day in so many other cultures.
In Ireland, of course, it's Nollaig na mBan (Women's Christmas or Little Christmas), when men would do the housework and make meals etc. The Irish media loves Nollaig na mBan, even though it doesn't make a whole lot of sense in today's context. I've noticed that our feminist society still wants all the trappings of chivalry! But I'm in favour of almost all traditions, so I don't mind.
Monday, January 5, 2026
Excellent video on the Nineteen-Seventies...
Thursday, January 1, 2026
The Life of Riley
Happy New Year!
What's the first song you listened to in 2026? Perhaps it was "Aul Lang Syne", if you were at a New Year's Eve party. Or if you were watching a countdown show on TV.
I suppose it's possible you haven't listened to your first song of the year yet-- which might make you ponder the choice.
Firsts and lasts always seem significant to me, so I made sure to listen to a few optimistic songs at the beginning of the year.
The very first was "Don't Stop" by Fleetwood Mac, which isn't exactly one of my favourite songs, but which I like well enough. It's hard to think of a more upbeat, optimistic song, so that's the first that came to mind.
My second choice was "The Life of Riley" by the Lightning Seeds, which is one of my favourite songs of all time. Listening to the lyrics, and appreciating it anew, I decided to make it the subject of my first blog post in 2026.
"The Life of Riley" became well-known for its use on BBC's Match of the Day TV programme, back in the nineties. A looped sample of it was the backing music for the "Goal of the Month" segment of the show. "Goal of the Month" showed footage of great goals, and viewers got to vote for the best. So the music was already associated with dizzy heights (which is the name of a Lightning Seeds album) and euphoria-- because what else can you feel but euphoria, when you see a goal like this one?
The actual subject of the song is a father's hopes for his child. The songwriter Ian Broudie wrote it for his newborn son Riley.
Poems and songs that parents write for their newborn children can run the whole gamut of emotions (see, for instance, "A Prayer for my Daughter" by W.B. Yeats, or "Born Yesterday" by Philip Larkin-- though that one isn't written by a parent). "Life of Riley" is entirely hopeful, even (as I suggested earlier) euphoric. And why shouldn't it be? We have more than enough laments, and life is pretty wonderful despite all its detractors.
The lyrics aren't exactly literary, and they're not polished. But they do the trick, and they have some sublime moments. They begin like this:
Lost in the Milky WaySmile at the empty sky and wait for
The moment a million chances may all collide
I'll be the guiding light
Swim to me through stars that shine down
And call to the sleeping world as they fall to Earth.
I do think there's one great line in that opening verse, though. It's this one: "The moment a million chances may all collide". The internal sounds are very pleasing and harmonious, and it captures (for me) the sense of every moment's uniqueness.
Roll me over and turn me around





