Tag Archives: ireland

irish journalism

NUJ Membership – what’s the verdict?

If you’re a journalist like me, there’s a good chance that a few quid disappears from your account monthly, heading for Liberty Hall, in the form of an NUJ Membership payment. In these NAMAesque times, every penny counts, and union membership must be worth its money.

So I’m asking the question – what do Irish journalists reckon about NUJ memberhip – is it value for money?

One editor I worked with snorted at anyone who joined the NUJ. He had been a long-standing member, he said, and asked them for legal advice once, the only time he approached them. They completely failed him and he cancelled his sub. He was also of the view that NUJ rates, if adhered to rigidly, would preclude him from rewarding better journalists for doing more valuable work. And NUJ membership certainly didn’t help journalists I worked with who were let go, other than offer a bit of solidarity, á la People’s Front of Judaea.

But I’m a card-carrier, and curious to see how many other journalists reckon that card is worth the money.

So if you can spare 90 seconds, please go and fill out my survey, NUJ – Value for Money, and feel free to pass on the link to anyone you think might be willing to contribute.

http://tinyurl.com/nujvalue

I’ll post results here once I have them.

Africa Aid/Development ireland sponsorship

No Thanks | No Donations

Thank you is so simple, yet so important. This post from a blog about fundraising for nonprofits illustrates the negative power of failing to thank donors. And it jogged my memory, as did some fairly robust pleas for cash from the RNLI at a dinner on Saturday night.

I’ll be honest – and this isn’t a popular stance if you’re a sailor – I’ll find it hard to donate to the RNLI again. In 2003 I ran the Dublin marathon for three charities – the MS Society, the RNLI and Lohada, a small Tanzanian NGO I helped set up as independent back in 2001.

Of the three, the RNLI were positively ignorant about the donation I was trying to give them. The MS Society wrote to thank me, I was sent a hand-made card by one of the kids in the Tanzanian orphanage. The RNLI were obstructive from the start (as I wasn’t running solely for them, they had no way for me to fit into their system), and were completely ungrateful upon receipt of the cash.

I handed them just over €1,000, and was met with a ‘right, whatever’ response.

And at the dinner this weekend, their speaker, who was gifted the MC role at the event, seemed arrogant in her assumption that she had a right to demand money from us, as we were all marine-related folk gathered in one room.

All of which made me very angry indeed.

The old mantra of no shirt, no service, is a manners thing. If you can’t be bothered putting on a shirt to show me some respect, I can’t be bothered serving you food.

Same goes for NGOs. If I go out of my way to raise funds for you, it probably means I’d do it again. I’m a renewable revenue stream.

No thanks, no donations. Simple.

On Social Media in Ireland

Having taken a step back from blogging and all that ‘meta jazz’ for a while, I’ve had a good long think about the Social Media Guru (SMG) vid I put together in September, and what motivated me to be so cynical. The video is the only web ‘thing’ I’ve ever really created, it has generated 143,000 hits and counting. That’s unexpectedly large given what it was (ten times the hits of the much-vaunted DJ Hip Op vid), yet infinitely small in Youtube terms (20 million people have watched this surprised kitten video).

It sparked some pointed animosity from American SMGs, already sick of being mocked, despite the video being aimed squarely at their clients, whose gullibility and laziness of mind is the root of the real issue. One full-on viral case study was done on its global spread, which was very interesting indeed.  The video was met largely with a wall of silence by those in the sector in Ireland, in comparison which is unsurprising due to the small marketplace here.

I’m not a guru or a techie, I’m not selling any guru-like services (at present), but I have helped friends get started in the sphere and written copy for plenty of websites. I’m also a chronic lurker. read more »

ireland media Portfolio

Play the hand you’re dealt

Last week I took a bunch of college students back to school. After three hours of poker, I stood up and walked away with 70 of their softly-bludged euros. It was a rare, rare win.

While I was busy fleecing them, we got talking about work, and the fact that I’m back freelancing again. The lads started asking me about what articles I most enjoyed researching. I’m not a big poker player, but when I mentioned a long feature on student poker, and promptly scooped another hefty pot of chips, there was a collective groan. He’s a fucking shark.

The article appeared on the front of the Agenda magazine while I was still a student myself.

Sunday Business Post, Feb 27, 2005

Poker School

It’s 7.30pm and the last of 270 students are trickling through the doors of the Gresham Hotel. Ten to a table, they sit and make guarded small talk, eyeing each other nervously.

With a top prize of €1,500 on the line, there’s little time for making friends, and everyone is anxious to get down to business. Niall Hughes of Trinity College’s Card Society announces to much applause, that the prize fund has reached €6,500. read more »

health ireland irish media Portfolio Sunday Business Post

‘Normality to Richard Pryor in four short years’

This was one of the hardest articles I ever chose to write. My mum (pictured) had a short but intense battle with MS in her mid-forties, which she ultimately lost. I paired up with Damien Mulley, who had been diagnosed recently, to write about our experiences of the condition. It’s heavy.

I wrote this six months after my father died, and some people remarked that it was an article I could never have written while he was alive, given the situation it describes. It doesn’t attach any blame to him for his response, but it would have been….awkward. And as for the motives behind it – I don’t know. Therapy, I guess. It’s still hard to re-read, and seeing it in print was much harder than the process of writing it, which I undertook pretty much on autopilot. I picked up a copy of the paper and went into a coffee shop to read it that day, and nearly collapsed when I saw the pictures of my mother in the paper. Anyway, here it is:

Sunday Business Post, September 07, 2008

MS, which attacks a person’s nervous system, directly affects more than 6,000 people in Ireland. Diagnosis often prompts a frenzy of research, as the new patient scrambles to arm themselves with as much information as they can. Often, the first stop is someone whose life has already been affected by MS.

For Cork-based journalist Damien Mulley, diagnosed this January, his first port of call was a fellow journalist, Markham Nolan, whose mother died in 2004 after an unusually brief time with the illness. Here, they share their very different perspectives on a condition that is a familiar presence in thousands of Irish homes. read more »

books ireland irish Portfolio Sunday Business Post

“When my clients die of Aids … I count those deaths as victories”

It’s not easy to like a man who says things like that. Even less when he fills a book with similar throwaway phrases and sundry self-aggrandising sop, and you have to read the whole thing and turn in a review at the end.

I like reading books. I count book reviews as a perk of working in journalism, but this death row lawyer-cum-author made me want to fly to Texas just in the hope I’d get to punch him.

Sunday Business Post, January 31, 2010

David R Dow, the high profile death-row lawyer responsible for Killing Time: One Man’s Race to Stop an Execution, would have us believe he is among the highest ranks of legal martyr. His job is, after all, an endless moral conflict. read more »

Portfolio travel

Desert Trolley

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I’m no festivalgoer. All that mud, all those drunks. It’s not my bag, not in the hardcore sense, at least. I drove to Oxegen and drove home Saturday night, rather than have my head stepped on in my sleep, or have to brush my teeth with the end of a flagon of Linden Village. But a festival in the Sahara has a certain appeal. Gimme a cotton tent, some rebellious desert nomads, a few hundred camels and toilets with no water and I’m all set.

Sunday Business Post, February 20, 2005

For the smug, self-satisfied world traveller, nothing brings on a smile like a heavily-stamped passport. Above that, the greater goal is stamps that say ‘I’ve been there and back’ on the road less travelled. The trump of all passport stamps must be that inked in the fabled city of Timbuktu. read more »

irish journalism politics

Cashing in on The Bull’s departure


Box o’ Receipts

Originally uploaded by Jim FraziDiner

Ding Dong, The Bull is gone.

After dogged pursuit by Ken Foxe and backup work by Gavin Sheridan and Mark Coughlan at Gavin’s Blog and TheStory.ie, Ceann Comhairle John O’Donoghue has been exposed as a spendthrift and after sustained pressure has finally announced he will retire, his massive expense bill having finally caught up with him.

The power of the FOI has been, arguably, the biggest revelation in this saga, as well as the amount of work that it takes from a journalist to expose and wear down one single Fianna Fail TD, despite a litany of financial abuse. Digging stoically through reams of paperwork, while not glamorous, yields results.

It can’t stop there, though, and with all the dust raised by Joxer’s departure, the danger is that the end goal, political transparency, becomes obscured. Joxer could becomes but one high-profile sacrificial lamb, while the core problem remains. What is really needed is a reform of the system of unvouched expenses, something that makes TD’s spend completely transparent to every voter. So who’s next on the chopping block? And will other journalists now take up the mantle of FOI pursuit more virulently?

I’ve often heard it said that anyone who wants to be a politician should be automatically barred from office. Perhaps one way of making the post less attractive to those who see the perks and think they would make it all worthwhile is to make their spending immediately visible. We need a glass wall into the goings on of Dail Eireann.We need to see into the worm farm.

Joxer may, through his iniquity, bequeath us a more transparent system and his departure could improve Irish politics beyond the simple fact of his replacement. But those who claim that John O’Donoghue went into politics for all the right reasons should remember that he’s leaving it for all the wrong ones.

Uncategorized

Short Story Wordle

Picture 7

I’ve written my first short story in years (and am working on a second) , and have absolutely no idea what to do with it. So, I thought I’d create a Wordle of it, which doesn’t seem to give anything away at all in terms of plot. Only two people have read it to date. Both reviews are positive, from people who I think would be critical if it warranted it.

Any suggestions on what to do with a short story would be greatly appreciated. Right now it’s stashed doing nothing, like a wad of leftover currency after a holiday.

film sailing Uncategorized

Lucky Strike

I spent last weekend working in the press office for the Volvo Dun Laoghaire Regatta, with a few hours each day of frantic news-gathering for the daily report, in-Design work producing the newsletter, and interviewing the sailors.

Story of the weekend actually happened before the racing got underway – when Antix Dubh narrowly avoided being struck by lightning on its journey up from Cork. The blast hit the water 15 metres from the boat and fried the electronics for a time. Here, delivery skipper Rob O’Leary describes the incident.