marty in the morning
Lyric FM weekday morning 7am
We have established that nationalism in general is selfishness taken to the extreme, and that it becomes a form of evil. And in the case of our version of nationalism, perhaps the ultimate easie is that many of us, in theory, would broadly agree with a united Ireland if it weren’t for the nationalists themselves. ambition.
upon newstalk breakfast, Shane Coleman and Vincent Wall (representing Ciara Kelly), in light of the recent upsurge in nationalist ‘feelings’, including the Wolf Tones concert at Feil en Fobile in Belfast, consider these I was kicking the problem away. ’” for that Republican backreperie.
Coleman and Wall shared the view that young people are understandably less aware of the potentially catastrophic consequences of rising raw nationalism. This “kick-around” by co-presenters works well simply because it injects an energy into the minutes that more traditional presentation styles don’t allow. ireland in the morning – And the energy you can get at that time of the day will be appreciated.
Coleman and Wall were joined by Austin Stack. Stuck’s father, Brian, was Chief of the Portliese Prison and was murdered by the Provos. Stack spoke of this “creeping up” of nationalist exhibitionism, the IRA celebrations taking place in Northern Ireland recently but “growing here too”.
Especially for him and his family, it has a “traumatic” effect, but perhaps more work needs to be done to reconstruct these arguments. One of the important things about the likes isn’t that their music is “Irish,” it’s that it’s bad. Almost all “nationalist” music is bad and frankly I don’t know anyone who likes it.
Unless we accept that our culture is fundamentally bad, it’s not our culture.
Elvis Presley is more endemic to an evolved Irish culture than that found in Feyre en Fobile. As a bonus, his music isn’t bad. Sounds good. or is it?
near
Elvis Presley on stage in 1973
As journalist and broadcaster Pat Carty explained to Kieran Cuddyhy: hard shoulder Yes, Elvis is mostly good and occasionally bad.
video of the day
Interestingly, Elvis changed our culture forever. Around that time, Sean South of Garry Owen, who was a particular favorite of Wolfe’s Tones, was influencing our consciousness. Now we know that South was far to the right and was about to meet himself at the opposite end.
Last week they celebrated the 45th anniversary of Elvis’ death. It was one of the most important events for mankind, and most people alive at the time can remember what they were doing when they heard the news. I was listening to Tony Prince on Radio Luxembourg – the Prince mourns the King and goes from one “royal ruler” to another.
This should have been covered more on all platforms, but hard shoulder You’ve done it right with Carty.
Marty Whelan has found his home on Lyric FM. Fantasy The sense of permanence was reinforced by one of his Phil O’Kelly, who got a tattoo of Marty’s face on his thigh after he lost a football bet.
When Marty joined Lyric, some felt he wouldn’t be a good fit. He turned out to bring a lot to the party, and he’s arguably the only Lyric host to have the image rendered as a tattoo.
Former newsreader Amon Lawler, who was a key figure during Lyric’s launch, never had a head tattoo on any part of anyone. Liz Nolan and Edin Gormley have a lot of accolades, but no one went to her tattoo parlor with a photo of the two of them.
The Marty movement is growing: Tiocfaidh ár lá.