Gavin Friday: Thief of My Heart

Published on January 30th, 2010 in: Issues, Kiss Me I'm Irish, Music, Music Reviews, Retrovirus |

By Julie Finley

I remember it like it was yesterday. It had to have been the end of 1991 as I was still in tenth grade, and I remember there being snow on the ground. It was probably shortly after Christmas, because I can’t recall having enough money to buy more than one album at a time; even if they were used & in the bargain bin, I still rarely had over $10 on me at any given time. I usually starved myself in high school by not spending at least some of my lunch money just so I could buy whatever music I could, because I had priorities.

Continue reading ‘Gavin Friday: Thief of My Heart’

Growing Old With The State

Published on January 30th, 2010 in: Comedy, DVD, Retrovirus, TV |

By Jesse Roth

Bopping along through the 1990s, I found myself immersed in a rather enjoyable childhood. I was growing in all the same ways my elementary-aged kid peers were, while also straddling the fence between juvenile pleasures and my desire to feel more grown-up. This divide applied almost everywhere in my life, from musical tastes to imagining that I was living a twenty-something life like my idols on MTV and other teen/adult-friendly fare. At this same juncture in life, I was also refining my sense of humor, discovering what made me laugh beyond the physical comedy I enjoyed in cartoons, Three Stooges shorts, and the very early Woody Allen films (such as Take the Money and Run) my family had introduced to me.
Continue reading ‘Growing Old With The State

White Lies, To Lose My Life. . .

Published on January 30th, 2010 in: Current Faves, Music, Music Reviews, Reviews |

By Jim R. Clark

I saw this band for the first time on the Ohio PBS music variety television program called Strictly Global and I was hooked by the dark and foggy video for a song called “To Lose My Life.” These three young guys from Ealing, West London have a wonderful new and old sound.
Continue reading ‘White Lies, To Lose My Life. . .

The Life Of A 21st Century Musician: An Interview With Jim Campilongo

Published on January 30th, 2010 in: Interviews, Music |

Interviewed by J Howell

To read this article as a single page, please click this link.

ten gallon cats

Once, longer ago than I care to admit, I was a kid who’d just picked up his first electric guitar. Around that time, Guitar Player seemed to always have this ad in the back, featuring a hilariously startled-looking cat, for a band called “Jim Campilongo and the Ten Gallon Cats.” That very silly image stuck with me. A few years later, Jim was finally featured in the magazine, and though I still hadn’t heard his music, the descriptions of “ghostly wails emanating from a Vibrolux Reverb” also stuck with me.

Fast forward a few more years and, thanks to the miracle of the Internet, I was finally able to hear Jim, and damned if Heaven Is Creepy wasn’t all I’d hoped it would be and then some. Jim’s newest record, Orange, is out in February on his own Blue Hen Records. Campy just may be the best guitarist working today, and he recently took some time out of his very busy schedule to chat with me.
Continue reading ‘The Life Of A 21st Century Musician: An Interview With Jim Campilongo’

Eight Reasons To Love Cillian Murphy

Published on January 30th, 2010 in: Issues, Kiss Me I'm Irish, Movies |

By Less Lee Moore

batman begins
Batman Begins, 2005

8. He can play creepy.
Let’s get this one out of the way first. If I had a nickel for every time I heard or read the word “creepy” (or worse, “BUT he’s so creepy!”) associated with Cillian Murphy, well, I’d have a hell of a lot of nickels.

Continue reading ‘Eight Reasons To Love Cillian Murphy’

Irish Things We Love: Dracula, By Bram Stoker

Published on January 30th, 2010 in: Books, Editorial, Issues, Kiss Me I'm Irish |

Ask people to name some Irish things that they love, and they may come up with a list of things that are obviously Irish, like the band U2 or Guinness beer. I would argue though, that our cultural milieu, especially these days, is heavily inspired by the work of an Irish writer, specifically, Bram Stoker, author of Dracula. Both Dacre Stoker, great-grandnephew of Bram (and co-author of Dracula: the Un-Dead), and Dennis McIntyre, director of the Bram Stoker’s Dracula Organisation, advance this point of view.
Continue reading ‘Irish Things We Love: Dracula, By Bram Stoker’

In Defense Of Fanfiction

Published on January 30th, 2010 in: Over the Gadfly's Nest |

By Lisa Anderson

A few weeks ago, a friend of mine who is a published novelist posted a blog entry about fanfiction. He stated that he understood the ways in which it was flattering, and that it was probably good that fanfiction could not be stamped out. He also argued, though, that it was both stealing and lazy writing, because it borrowed someone else’s characters and world.

He has a right to his opinion, and in fairness, he stated it far more kindly than many others have. Nevertheless, I would like to explain why I disagree with him, and bring up some points he may not have considered. For the record, I am a writer of both original fiction and fanfiction.
Continue reading ‘In Defense Of Fanfiction’

That Would Be An Ecumenical Matter: Father Ted and Ireland

Published on January 30th, 2010 in: Comedy, Issues, Kiss Me I'm Irish, TV |

By Hanna

Most of Ireland’s cultural presence in Western countries is undeniably depressing. Even such light-hearted fare as Breakfast on Pluto features repression of sexuality by the church, the IRA, terrorism, and attacks on women for having children out of wedlock.
Continue reading ‘That Would Be An Ecumenical Matter: Father Ted and Ireland’

Comments Off on That Would Be An Ecumenical Matter: Father Ted and Ireland