Locations that feature in the Irish crime series about Stoneybatter PI Moss Reid...
Wednesday 28 August 2019
The 'Pigeon House' of Stoneybatter
Pigeons of Discontent is a superb new documentary by Paddy Cahill about the pigeons of Stoneybatter. It was inspired by Cónal Thomas's report in the Dublin Inquirer two years ago about the birds that congregate around the "Pigeon House" on Manor Street.
Despite the film's title and a few dissenting voices, it's essentially a celebration of the wee flockers. Among those taking part is Mary Barnecutt from the band Mary and the Pigeons - who also provide the atmospheric music at the start.
For more on Paddy Cahill's brilliant work, check out this post on my other blog about Long Now, his Amanda Coogan documentary.
Tuesday 9 July 2019
Billy in the Bowl, the Stoneybatter Strangler
Above: "Billy in the Bowl" by Shota Kotake, part of the @DublinCanvas series of painted traffic-light control boxes |
One of Dublin's most infamous killers is surely Billy in the Bowl, aka the Stoneybatter Strangler. He's a local ledge in our hood, as the young ones say.
But this being eighteenth-century folklore, bear in mind that the following facts might get blurry here and there...
Sunday 28 April 2019
'Dancing Bug' in Oxmantown
Yet another music vid shot in Stoneybatter's back streets. It's for the single "Dancing Bug", a collaboration between Aoife McCann aka Æ Mak on vocals and Le Boom - electronic duo Aimie Mallon and Chris Leech.
Prominent from the start is Carnew Street, also used by the Spice Girls two decades ago for their "Stop" video. Watch out for the fleeting but excellent drone shots of the grid of terraced streets of Oxmantown.
Thursday 28 March 2019
Mahon Printers and the fabric of society
1. The Huguenots
Dead industries and ways of production linger on in Dublin's street names. Some names reflect the Huguenots who settled here in Ireland, and their descendants in the city's growing middle classes. Many of them came as refugees from France, particularly after the Edict of Nantes was revoked in 1685.
Sunday 1 July 2018
Rainbows over Stoneybatter
Has Stoneybatter really become the "gay capital" of the Irish universe? Here are two possible answers...
Wednesday 27 September 2017
Benburb Street art (another update)
Benburb Street in Stoneybatter continues to have its little stretch of open-air gallery, which is one bright thing amid all that dilapidation and dereliction.
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