17/03/2011

SING ALONG WITH KEITH URBAN!!!



http://www.people.com/people/videos/0,,20473902,00.html

WATCH THE VIDEO: Go behind the scenes of Keith Urban's video for "Without You"
The singer gets silly with a banjo but is serious about the subject that inspired the song


WATCH THE VIDEOCLIP: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2Eo1PtWKio

Artist: Urban Keith
Song: Without You
Album: Keith Urban


I’ve loved you since the very first day
When I caught you looking my way
A smile and just knew it.
Aint open to you came along, no one ever my song,
Now its climbing with a bullet.

Its nice to have someone, so honestly devoted,
That when it’s said and done, girl I hope you know that,

The travelling, the singing, it don’t mean nothing without you
The fast cars, the guitars, they are all just second to,
This life, this love that you and I have been dreaming of, for so long
It’d all be as good as gone, without you.

Oh ho, without you, hey...

Along comes a baby girl, and a suddenly my little world,
Just got a whole lot bigger, yes it did.
And people that I barely knew, love me ‘cos I’m part of you
Man I start to figure
How two souls can be, miles from one another
But still you and me, have somehow found each other.
The travelling, the singing, it don’t mean nothing without you
The fast cars, the guitars, they are all just second to,
This life, this love that you and I have been dreaming of, for so long
It’d all be as good as gone, without you.

Without you, ohhhh ho ho
Without you I’d survive, but I’d have to have a notion
That I could live this life, just going through the motions
The travelling, the singing, it don’t mean nothing without you
The fast cars, the guitars, they are all just second to,
This life, this love that you and I have been building up so high
It’s never gonna touch the sky, without you.

Mmmm, without you
Without you, baby, baby, baby without you
Without you.

10 Best: Shamrock shenanigans

By Pól Ó Conghaile
Monday March 14 2011

10 Best: Shamrock shenanigans


Parades, potatoes and pyrotechnics — it has to be St Patrick’s Day, says Pól Ó Conghaile
Follow our patron’s footprints in Mayo
St Patrick wore down a fair whack of shoe leather converting Ireland to Christianity. You can trace some of his footsteps over the three-day Croagh Patrick Heritage Trail Walking Festival running from March 18-20. Covering 61km as it rambles from Balla to Ballintubber, Aghagower and Murrisk, the trail crosses bog, fields, famine villages and some of the oldest native woodland on the Atlantic Coast, offering up awesome views, unspoilt countryside and finally, the shoulder of Croagh Patrick itself. Best of all, villagers will be dishing up homemade cakes and scones as you go. Details: €15 per day. Tel: 094 936 6709; croaghpatrickheritage trail.com.
The parade to beat them all in Dublin
Dublin’s St Patrick’s Festival has long since spilled over from March 17 into several days of shenanigans. This year’s festival has a literary theme, with the parade based on Roddy Doyle’s new short story, ‘Brilliant’. The story urges the city to get its funny-bone back — something it could start at ‘Text in the City (€25), a comedy improv night during which the audience texts suggestions to a huge mobilephone screen on stage. Throw in free events such as the céilí, a literary treasure hunt and a boat race between Trinity College and UCD, and you’ve got the makings of several days out. Details: March 16-20. See stpatricksfestival.ie.
Go as Gaeilge in Carlow
Seachtain na Gaeilge finishes up on St Patrick’s Day, but Carlow is keeping the momentum going over the whole month of March. Don’t worry if you’ve got the cúpla focal or the céad míle fáilte either — the celebrations are open to everyone. This Wednesday is a fun No Béarla Day. Thursday sees a blessing of the shamrock and Mass in Irish at Carlow Cathedral, followed by a St Patrick’s Day parade and céilí. Other happenings organised by Glór Cheatharlach include bilingual table quizzes, lunchtime storytelling and an Irish-language production of Lady Gregory’s ‘Spreading the News’. Details: Tel: 059 915 8105; glorcheatharlach.ie.
Travel St Patrick’s trail in the North
Fed up of Paddy’s Day festivals? Why not take the holiday at your own pace by following a trail of saintly sights in Northern Ireland. St Patrick’s Trail is a 92-mile (148km) driving route taking in stops such as the Saul Church in Strangford (where Patrick began his mission), Down Cathedral (where he is buried) and the Holy Wells at Struell (erm, where he is said to have sung psalms all night while naked). Don’t miss the interpretive St Patrick’s Centre in Downpatrick or St Patrick’s Trian in Armagh, which takes a closer look at the saint through writings found in the 9th-century ‘Book of Armagh’. Details: NITB (1850 230 230) has a special offer of two nights’ B&B at the Marine Court Hotel in Bangor from £70/€83pps. See discovernorthernireland.com/ stpatrick.
Love your leprechauns in Louth Fancy a Paddy’s Day with a difference?
You’ll get it in Dundalk, where 100 leprechauns are preparing to abseil down the Crowne Plaza Hotel. Sounds nuts? That’s because it is. The 170 ft abseil is both a charity event and promotion for the National Leprechaun Hunt scheduled to take place on the Cooley Peninsula on March 27. Bizarrely, Carlingford appears to have been designated a Special Protection Area for Little People under the EU European Habitats Directive. “People love leprechauns,” says coordinator Kevin Woods. “They are just too embarrassed to admit it for some reason.” Details: A charity abseil costs €99. Tel: 042 937 3100; carlingford.ie
March to the beat on Limerick’s streets
Some 70,000 people are expected on the streets of Limerick on March 17, with floats, dancers and musicians uniting under a sporty theme for the parade on O’Connell Avenue. Other events? The Hunt Museum has arts, crafts and face-painting; street performers and tunes are scheduled for the Milk Market, and d’Unbelievables are at the University Concert Hall (€30). The festival wraps up on Sunday, with hundreds of marching musicians competing in an International Band Parade, followed by prizes and a free concert at Arthur’s Quay Park. And not a Rubberbandit in sight? yet. Details: The Clarion Hotel (061 444144; clarionhotellimerick. com) has a St Patrick’s Weekend offer bundling B&B and dinner from €60pps. See limerick.ie/ stpatricksfestival.
Go green with glass in Kerry
After the hellish few years we’ve endured at the hands of this recession, Ireland is entitled to blow its trumpet a bit over St Patrick’s Day. If you make the trip to Killarney, however, you could be blowing glass too. Glassblowing workshops are taking place from March 15-19 at Terrence McSweeney’s studio in Knockattagglemore, offering visitors the chance to learn about the process before blowing a bubble themselves. It’s a fantastically skilful craft, so don’t expect to achieve anything other than a lump of molten goo — just as well a professional will be on hand to show you how it’s done. Details: Tel: 064 664 3295; craftinireland.com.
Trad for toddlers in Clare
The Speks are a six-piece band playing traditional Irish music for children, and they’re anchoring an eclectic series of events at Glór, the arts and entertainment venue in Ennis, on March 17. The band’s music has been described as “Riverdance for toddlers”, and kids are encouraged to sing and dance along to nursery rhymes and songs. Grown-ups will find their toes tapping too. Other events on the day include a screening of ‘Darby O’Gill and the Little People’ (€5) and a Food Fair showcasing some of the best jams, cheeses, pickles and bread from the Banner County. Details: €5 (parents go free). Tel: 065 684 5370; glor.ie.
See the sky sizzle in Wexford
A massive 1.6 tonnes of fireworks, five tonnes of firing equipment and 6,000 pyrotechnic effects. Yes, folks, it’s Skyfest time, and this year the St Patrick’s Festival fireworks roadshow is coming to Wexford. A blazing display of tailed comets, umbrellas of light and a stunning 300m waterfall of cascading silver stars (the largest pyrotechnic waterfall ever to appear in Ireland) are all set to explode over a kilometre of celestial canvas above the River Slaney. The fireworks will be broadcast live on RTE, and the theme is ‘Making Magic Happen’. Details: March 19, 6.30pm- 8.30pm. See stpatricks festival.ie.
- Pól Ó Conghaile

17 Things you didn't know about St Patrick's day


The Independent
By Damian Corless
Saturday March 12 2011
Saint Patrick's Day is the most international of national days, celebrated from Boston to Buenos Aires and from Singapore to Seoul. What those cities also tend to share each March 17 are the mild warm conditions perfect for throwing a street party.
In Ireland it's different. There's an old saying that March comes in like a lion, and the Irish winter normally lurks in the long grass to give us a good mauling at the first glimpse of a skimpily dressed majorette.
But does St Patrick's Day have to be on March 17? Couldn't we move it to sometime more kindly?
That's just what we did 10 years ago in 2001 when foot and mouth brought Ireland to a standstill. March was scratched, and when the Dublin parade belatedly took place on a beautiful late May day it drew the biggest turnout ever of some 1.2 million.
In theory, Paddy's Day could be moved. After all, the Catholic Church shunts it whenever it interrupts Easter Week. In 1940, for instance, the Church observed it on April 3 and in 2008 on March 14.
Legend has it that St Patrick died on March 17, 461, but it's really a case of 'pick a number, any number'. It was given a slot on the calendar of saint's days in the 1600s after lobbying by the Waterford-born missionary Luke Wadding.
In practice, St Patrick's Day can't be moved because it's become such a world fixture that it's no longer ours. We share it with many parts where snow, rain and hail will never be a case for change.
In some places, we share it in a most literal sense. March 17 is a public holiday on the Caribbean island of Monserrat because it commemorates a failed slave revolt in 1768, which, by coincidence, ties in with the celebrations of the many islanders of Irish stock. In Boston, the feast doubles up with the original public holiday of Evacuation Day marking the withdrawal of British troops during the 1776 revolution.
Such ambiguity is typical of the legacy of Patrick, a man who might have been born in Wales or Scotland or elsewhere, and whose real name might have been Maewyn Succat.
That said, from our own bitter experience we must concede that he might indeed have frozen to death under a barrage of hailstones on March 17, 461.
Here's 17 things we do know, sort of, about St Patrick's Day.
1 This State's first St Patrick's Parade took place in Dublin in 1931. New York lays claim to the world's first planned parade in 1762, but Boston claims an inpromptu one for 1737 when a meeting of the new Charitable Irish Society spilled on to the streets and turned into a procession of rowdy paddywhackery.
2 St Patrick's association with green is just a couple of centuries old. For over 1,000 years St Patrick's hue was blue and today St Patrick's Blue is the official colour of the President, the National Stud and UCD's sports teams. Before partition, the strip of the Irish national football squad was St Patrick's Blue.
3 St Patrick's Day did not become a public holiday here until 1903 when the Westminster Parliament passed a bill introduced by the Irish MP James O'Mara. Twenty years later, O'Mara would do his best to ruin the day for millions. (See No 5)
4Before independence, the puritanical Gaelic League waged a campaign of moral intimidation against publicans, demanding they shut their doors all day Paddy's Day. The bullying worked for a few years until the publicans, realising there was no law to force them to close, defied the republicans.
5 With Independence in 1922, the new political elite made a ban on Paddy's Day pub opening a top priority. James O'Mara led the way as chief killjoy. In support, one TD said "the drowning of the shamrock" was "a direct insult to the Saint" that must be "obliterated".
A senator insisted that if St Patrick came back to life he'd drown anyone drowning the shamrock. Countess Markievicz stressed that in addition to pubs, hotels must also stay dry because "I do not see why rich people should not be kept off their drink as well as poor".
6 In Australia, Melbourne's city fathers also tried to stamp out Paddy's Day drinking in 1922, but from a different angle. The pro-British officials opposed Irish independence. Cork-born Archbishop Kevin Mannix led a campaign of civil disobedience and the parade passed off. At the next Irish general election a woman stormed out of the polling station shouting that if she couldn't vote for Archbishop Mannix she'd vote for no one.
7 The pub ban became law in 1927, but TDs worried about sales from the head shops of the day, so-called 'dairy shops' with names like Hyacinth, Bluebell and Tulips. These were openly selling wine on Paddy's Day, as were the country's chemists. One TD worried about women getting a prescription filled and slipping a sly bottle of port into their handbags.
8 Guinness gave most workers the day off. With no pubs open, the lucky ones were those who had to work the holiday. They received triple pay and as much stout as they could guzzle.
9 For decades, all adverts were banned on St Patrick's Day, which was devoted to traditional music, religious services and uplifting back-from-the-future speeches such as Taoiseach De Valera's 1943 pep-talk looking forward to returning to a Brigadoon world of "happy maidens dancing at the crossroads".
10 From 1927 to 1961 the RDS Dog Show was the only place to legally drink on Paddy's Day. Huge crowds turned up. One TD complained it was a grand occasion "except for all the damned dogs".
11 The independent republic of Limerick openly flouted the opening ban, with thousands of drinkers flooding the lawless city. Limerick police gave the publicans the 'Nelson's Eye', after the admiral who ignored orders by turning his blind eye to semaphore signals.
12 Nelson's Pillar on Dublin's O'Connell St was half demolished by a terrorist bomb a week before Paddy's Day 1966. The Army blew up the stump two days before the parade, causing far more damage than the bombers. RTÉ and the newspapers obeyed a government request to censor out the wreckage from parade coverage.
13 In a Simpson's Paddy's Day special, newsman Kent Brockman calls it "the day when everyone is Irish, except the gays and the Italians". The NY parade's ban on gays remains upheld in law because it's deemed a religious event.
14 There was a diplomatic incident in Rome in 1969 when Italian VIPs received invites to a Paddy's Day bash at the Irish embassy. The bigwigs were miffed that unused invites from 1968 had been recycled, with the '68 date crossed out and '69 inserted.
15 This year's Moscow parade has been abandoned on the grounds it would cause traffic disruption. Some believe the real reason is Ireland's recent expulsion of a Russian spymaster for forging Irish passports. A miniature indoor party will replace the parade.
16 As Tourism Minister in 1996, Enda Kenny oversaw the extension of Dublin's St Patrick's Day parade into a week-long festival. At the other end of the scale is the Cork village of Dripsey which stages the world's shortest parade, which runs 23.4 metres from The Weigh Inn pub to The Lee Valley bar, which bookend the hamlet.
17 St Patrick's Day 1959 saw the birth of the least successful ever Irish export to the US. The brainchild of Irish-American businessman William Curtis, The Shamrock was a gas-guzzling saloon. Sadly, the engine was far too puny to carry the big, heavy frame, and it was impossible to change a punctured tyre without dislocating the entire axle. Ten thousand were supposed to flood the US market. Eight were completed before the kitty ran out.
- Damian Corless

Lick Me, I'm Irish! Your St. Patrick's Day Pets

Lick Me, I'm Irish! Your St. Patrick's Day Pets
Everybody's Irish on March 17 — especially your pets

Mar 14 2011

RALPH & CAESAR

Are two leprechauns double the luck? We think yes! Jana Malone (woofiesmom) presents her adorable pups, Ralph the pug (nice hat!) and Caesar the English bulldog.

Everyone's Irish on St. Patrick's Day

Everyone's Irish on St. Patrick's Day

By MICHAEL LYLE
VIEW STAFF WRITER





Members of local pipe and drum bands play during last year?s Southern Nevada Sons of Erin St. Patrick?s Day Parade. This year?s parade is set for 10 a.m. Saturday on Water Street in Henderson. Pipe and drum bands are expected at the parade and at other venues in the valley this week in honor of St. Patrick?s Day.F. Andrew TAYLOR/VIEW file photo


With shamrocks in hand, residents are invited to participate in valleywide St. Patrick's Day celebrations and make their own luck this week.
The valley is going green in celebration of the Irish holiday that honors St. Patrick, who is credited with bringing Christianity to Ireland.
"He was a British fellow," said Dona Brown, the entertainment coordinator and member of Southern Nevada Sons of Erin. "He taught the druids and pagans about Christianity."
Centuries later, various venues around the city are ready to offer Irish-themed events.
From Thursday through Sunday, the city of Henderson is hosting the 45th annual Southern Nevada Sons of Erin St. Patrick's Day Parade & Festival at the Henderson Events Plaza, 200 S. Water St.
"Everybody needs to come out and be Irish for the day," said Brown. "If you aren't Irish, you will be by the time you leave."
The four-day extravaganza includes the signature parade, going to the theme of "Shamrocks and Shillelaghs," with more than 100 entries including festive floats, Celtic dancers, bagpipers and marching bands. The parade kicks off at 10 a.m. Saturday on Water Street.
All four days also include family-friendly entertainment with a carnival from 5 to 10 p.m. Thursday and Friday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday.
"There's going to be a variety of games for all ages and skill levels," said Nicole Johnson with the city of Henderson.
Food demonstrations and tasting contests also are planned.
Admission is free, but carnival games and rides require paid admission.
Live entertainment is slated to be on the events plaza stage from 5 to 9 p.m. Thursday and Friday, noon to 9 p.m. Saturday and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday and includes performances from Brown, who teaches basic Irish step dancing, and music from Killian's Angels, Darby O'Gill and the Little People, and Finnegan's Wake.
"The Irish jig is my favorite part of the celebration," said Brown. "It is fun to see people get up and try to learn how to do it."



Jodie Foster: You'll See the Real Mel Gibson in His Next Film

Jodie Foster: You'll See the Real Mel Gibson in His Next Film

Thursday March 17, 2011 09:05 AM EDT



Jodie Foster, who has stood by Mel Gibson throughout the very public trials of his private life, hopes audiences reconnect with the actor in his next film – which she directed and also stars in.

"At this particular place, the most beautiful part of Mel, I think, is onscreen," Foster, 48, told PEOPLE at Wednesday's premiere of The Beaver at the South By Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas. "People will see the movie, and they'll see what an incredibly deep and committed performance he gives, and hopefully they'll have some insight into who Mel is as a human being."

Films may be fiction, Foster says, but they can reveal truths about the actors who work on them.

"Obviously we're playing characters," she says, "but it's our gestures and our psyches that are on the line, and this film is all about a lot of what Mel cares about."

It certainly has an offbeat premise. Half comedy and half tragedy, it stars Gibson, 55, as a clinically depressed man rescued from the brink of suicide by a beaver hand puppet, who becomes his best friend and worst enemy. Foster stars as Gibson's wife.

Gibson was sentenced last week to probation and counseling in a long and sordid battery case involving his ex-girlfriend, Oksana Grigorieva. But Foster says the real Mel Gibson is nothing like the caricature he's become in the media.

People would be surprised, she says, by "what a sensitive person he is, and what an incredibly thoughtful guy he is. He's just an incredibly good friend, and a very thoughtful man."