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Messages - thejuice

#5521
Quote from: AZOffaly on June 26, 2008, 09:33:17 AM
I flew from Shannon to Stansted. Got the Stansted Express into London. Can't remember which station, Kings Cross, Picadilly, Liverpool Street, one of them.

would have been Liverpool st, i lived out near stansted for a while
#5522
Im going and bringing 3 Westmeath men with me. stayed in a backpackers place in picadilly last time. cheap as chips we drank in Cheers bar nearby which is a good spot.

So what players you lads keeping an eye out for. If I cant get one of the more obvious choice QB's like Brady, Manning think I'll probably go with Derrick Anderson. Think I'd pick him higher than Romo

#5523
Some women just have to be on top
#5524
Hurling Discussion / Re: Christy Ring
June 25, 2008, 12:40:33 PM
I reckon Meath can do well this year but we wont get near Westmeath. I'd be confident of getting out of our group with Mayo and Kerry without too much hassle.

We have a couple of nice hurlers in Nicky Horan and Eoin Brislane
#5525
Alot of running backs high in the draft, Couldnt find any info on scoring etc. How is the draft organised, as in who gets the first pick?
#5526
Royal County Kings are ready to play.
#5527
How do you sign up, do i need a yahoo ID?
#5528
General discussion / Re: Bogger Test!!
June 24, 2008, 10:11:01 AM
46%, thought I'd be higher than that,
#5529
General discussion / Re: The Recession
June 24, 2008, 10:03:05 AM
Oh well, what can we do only get used to it.
#5530
General discussion / Prods aren't sexy
June 23, 2008, 12:54:12 PM
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2008/jun/22/northernireland.ianpaisley

QuoteA biopic of Ian Paisley has run into financial difficulties with its screen writer claiming it would have been easier to fund his script if it had been about the IRA.

Award winning dramatist Gary Mitchell has completed the screenplay and started auditioning actors to play Paisley, but he claims that financing the project is proving difficult 'because the Prods aren't sexy enough'.

Mitchell, who will also direct the film, also said the Paisley family no longer supported the film because it was a 'warts and all' story about the recently departed First Minister of Northern Ireland. The Observer contacted the Paisley family last week but they refused to comment.

Mitchell insisted that the film would go ahead. 'I hope that when we make it we can show that Northern Ireland is a good place to make a movie and, of course, that this place can be put on screen from a Protestant perspective for a change.' However, this final detail could be the main stumbling block to the financing of the film. It seems TV and film companies have no problem with dramas about the IRA or films from a Catholic/nationalist perspective, as Hunger, Bloody Sunday, H3 and The Boxer would suggest.

'Look at the talent these films have attracted over the years like Daniel Day-Lewis, Brad Pitt, Harrison Ford and Liam Neeson. I doubt very much that a film on this theme could attract this kind of attention,' he said.

The north Belfast-born writer said his script had already managed to upset both sides of the sectarian divide. On seeing the first draft the Paisley family pulled their support while a reader given the script to analyse said it was too pro-unionist, Mitchell said.

'That is the peril of attempting impartiality when you write about Northern Ireland - you end up annoying either side. It reminds me of The Force of Change [Mitchell's 2000 play] when certain Protestants said it criticised the RUC too much and certain Catholics said it didn't criticise them nearly enough.'

In the script, Mitchell places much of the responsibility for the origins of the Ulster Troubles on Paisley. He said this did not fit in with Paisley's new image as one of the so-called 'Chuckle Brothers' - the moniker used to describe him and his former foe Martin McGuinness. Last week in Paisley's home town, Ballymena, the pair were seen laughing and joking, as they were during the DUP founder's year-long reign as First Minister when McGuinness was his deputy.

The dramatist said he has included scenes of a group of nascent loyalist paramilitaries who followed every word Paisley spoke in the late Sixties but then became disillusioned with 'the Big Man' as the Troubles erupted and they went to jail. Mitchell's outspoken views have landed him in trouble with loyalist terrorists. Three years ago he was forced to leave his home on the Rathcoole housing estate on the northern outskirts of Belfast by local members of the Ulster Defence Association. They had objected to the way Mitchell portrayed them in his stage plays and on television.

The former writer-in-residence at the Royal Court Theatre in London won support for his plight from writers, poets, artists and intellectuals across the world. He has since returned to Northern Ireland and is currently a writer-in-residence at Queen's University Belfast.
#5531
Dont like making people jealous but I met Johnny Logan. Also my brother got his photo taken with a wooden cut-out of Mr.T at the steam treshing fair in Drumree



but seriously, I met Eddie O'Sullivan, Ronan O'Gara and Brian O'Driscoll in the City West hotel.

But Im most proud of getting my photo with Graham Gerathy, Tommy Dowd and Sam Maguire in the Ashbourne House in 99, woo-hoo
#5532
General discussion / Re: Classic YouTube
June 22, 2008, 12:33:25 AM
http://ie.youtube.com/watch?v=NXkbhItH3nM

Theres loads of these types of videos but this one is great. DOnt like the song but I guess its appropriate. Nothing better than a big hit!!
#5534
Great win for Fermanagh and good to see Barry Owens back and what an impact he had. That was never a penalty and Sherry should never have been put off.
#5535
GAA Discussion / Re: Attendances this year
June 21, 2008, 12:13:36 PM
By the looks of things there was no-one at the Limerick-Cork game. Nothing quite as impressive as a nice big stadium with no-one in it is there., all those lovely green seats.