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Monthly Archives: August 2017

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Fota Wildlife Park is in a flurry of activity, after a monkey escaped from the facility last night. 

A search is well underway in Cork for the missing black and white colobus monkey, who has been spotted in the area. 

Trained rangers have been dispatched to find and detain the roaming primate. 

Twitter page Cork Safety Alerts tweeted about the unconfirmed sightings of the rogue ape, and Fota Wildlife Park responded.

'Our trained rangers have implemented the escape protocol for a Colobus monkey- we expect to have him safely home soon,' they replied.

'Recently one of our residents a Colobus Monkey, escaped from his habitat here at Fota Wildlife Park,' a spokesperson told The Sun.

"Our escape protocol was immediately implemented by Fota Wildlife Park’s trained animal rangers, and we expect he will be rescued very soon, and safely returned to his home.

What we would do to head down to Cork to join the search…

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Listen, we LOVE unicorns and we love Penneys – so when the two come together it is almost too much to handle. 

Enter: the magical slippers of your dreams. 

That's right ladies, our gorgeous pals over at Penneys are offering the most amazing unicorn slippers you have ever seen. 

The summer is coming to a close, and we are already planning our cosy winter nights in by the fire, in front of the telly. 

We are hoping to be head-to-toe in unicorn pyjamas, dressing gowns and slippers (naturally) and Penneys is where it's at.  

The best part? These mystical slippers will only set you back a TENNER -which is a small price to pay for pure joy.

They shared the image of the slippers on their Instagram page and it quickly gathered over 100k likes. Which means they're guaranteed to sell out fast.

It looks like there's a matching dressing gown too, as another added: "The most impractical yet beautiful #unicorn slippers (ONLY £8). I'm now regretting not getting the matching dressing gown."

One fan wrote: "Omg these are too cute!!" while another added: "Need these!!!!!!!"

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Whether she intended to make a splash or not, there's no denying that Sarah Harding's stint in the Celebrity Big Brother house has certainly caused ripples.

Support for the former Girls Aloud member started to wane within days of her entering the house, with Sarah's emotional outbursts doing little to curry favour with the viewing public.

And as the tide started to dramatically turn against the singer this week, her former band mater, Nadine Coyle, took to Twitter to share her thoughts on Sarah's time in the house.

After acknowledging that she is a little behind on the drama unfolding inside the house, Nadine was keen to share her perspective on Sarah.

"Inside info on Sarah, she is a very natural being. She dwells on of her feelings & acts on them. It is what makes her so unique," she wrote in a Twitter post.

Sounding incredibly protective of her former bandmate, Nadine added: "If I was there, no one would DARE utter a bad word to her!"

Nadine's stance appears to differ dramatically from other former band mate, Nicola Roberts, who recently made a referece to Sarah's scathing assessment of Fifth Harmony.

Taking to Instagram in the days that followed Sarah's less than complimetary opinion of the American band, Nicola wore a hat which read: "Women in Music are Dangerously Underestimated"

Nicola added the caption: "And that's why we should support each other."

As any Girls Aloud fan will know, Cheryl, Kimberley and Nicola shared a particularly close bond while Nadine and Sarah formed a tight friendship during their time in the group.

 

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Airports can be so stressful.

Whether you're a nervous traveller, a naturally anxious person or simply struggle with crowds and time restraints, the hustle and bustle of an airport is enough to test anyone.

With that in mind, Vancouver International Airport have launched the Less Airport Stress Initiative, which means that those passing through the airport will be given the opportunity to get acquainted with therapy dogs who want to make your life that bit easier.

The group includes two labradors, a Newfoundland landseer, a great Pyrenees, and a shih tzu who have, unsurprisingly, made a massive impression on holidaymakers in the Canadian airport.

Commenting on the scheme, a spokesman for the airport told the Press Association that the dogs' presence has brought a huge amount of reassurance to the public.

“The programme has been incredibly well-received with passengers requesting visits via social media while they wait, and Norman aka #BIGNORM becoming a bona fide rockstar in the process," he said.

While in the company of their minders, the gorgeous doggos are open to pats, belly rubs and general chats should you wish to engage. And we do wish.

And frankly, the idea of taking a holiday in the airport itself is really appealing to us right now.

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In case you're unaware, Fifty Shades of Grey made its debut on Irish television last night, and as Christian and Anastasia got intimately acquainted, Irish viewers devoted an inordinate amount of time to their phones.

All too aware of our Holy Catholic Ireland reputation, the Irish public spent hours sending themselves up on Twitter.

From catching family members engrossed in the plot to insisting the S&M storyline was too tame, Twitter was easily as entertaining as the movie causing the influx of posts.

And here, ladies, is just a sample…

1. Shook altogether.

 2. We did it, lads.

3. A fair estimation. 

 4. Well, now.

 5. Classic Mrs. Brown.

6. Tame as anything.

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In an effort to highlight the State's shortcomings in the handling of the Magdalene laundry cases, a rally is being held to honour the survivors this morning.

The Director of the National Women's Council of Ireland, Orla O'Connor, made reference to the government's failings while speaking ahead of the event in the city-centre  today.

"The government have promised there would be consultations with the survivors in terms of how they wanted to be remembered and memorialised and this has yet to happen," she said.

Orla insisted that the NWCI would show solidarity with survivors and urged the government to make a connection with those who have bore the brunt of their unfulfilled promises.

"We are very much in the National Women's Council, standing with the survivors of the Magdalene laundries today to say that the government need to start this, they need to talk to the survivors and see how they want to be remembered."

The rally comes days after campaigners called for the removal of a statue dedicated to the Sisters of Mercy outside a former laundry in Dublin.
 

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In a post which has piqued the attention of Twitter users today, Stephen Bear has revealed that it's officially all over between himself and Charlotte Crosby.

Taking to social media this afternoon, the 27-year-old, who won last year's series of Celebrity Big Brother, announced that the relationship he shared with the former Geordie Shore star has come to an end.

"Sadly me and Charlotte have split up," he wrote in the post which has been liked hundreds of times in mere minutes. 

"We have had a good run but we wasn't right for each other."

Alluding to the fact that Charlotte's ex-boyfriend, Gaz Beadle, yesterday announced he's soon to become a father, one Twitter user suggested that that revelation played a part in the break-up.

"Gaz's little Sprog got to her I suppose," wrote one of Stephen's followers in the moments that followed his sad upload.

Just yesterday, Charlotte chatted with SHEmazing, and sang the praises of the Ex on the Beach star, so news of their split has come as a shock to fans of the couple who co-host MTV's Just Tattoo of Us.

"I only have eyes for my beautiful gorgeous boyfriend, Stephen Bear," she said during our recent interview.

As followers may speculate that the split was born of Gary's big news, insiders are keen to clarify Charlotte's thoughts on the announcement.

Speaking to the Sun Online, an insider said: "Of course Charlotte is happy for Gary, she knows he’ll be a great dad and thinks a baby is a blessing."

“But when she found out it hit her really hard, she had no idea it was coming."

This is the second time this month that the pair have seemingly called it quits, so it may be a case of watching this space.

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Getting a taxi home is part and parcel of a night out. 

The buses are long over and the concept of a designated driver doesn't always work out, so hopping into any of the hundreds of available cabs streaming down Dublin's busy streets (or the streets of any county, country, or continent) is a transport option that most people don't think twice about. 

In the aftermath of a recent viral Facebook post, in which a woman detailed her horrifying experiences with a taxi driver, I thought it might be time to share a story of my own that left me shaken, angry, and ultimately made me realise how vulnerable the actions of others can make you feel.

The Facebook post, uploaded by Emma Shiels, recounts how her seemingly fine taxi driver insisted on taking the back roads through an industrial estate to her house, even after she told him he was going the wrong way. 

'I screamed at him ‘Leave me here I’m getting out' and I threw money at him and ran. it was only when I ran out of the car I noticed he had no I.D or pictures or license number on his dash,' she detailed, after he proceeded to drive down a road Emma knew led only to industrial wasteland. 

Emma clearly made the right choice by exiting the terrifying scenario, and chose to share her experiences to warn other women of the dangers of unlicensed taxis. 

My story is slightly similar to Emma's, and like her case, the Gardaí are currently investigating what happened to me on Easter Saturday night of this year. 

It was pretty late in the night, and I had just left a party in Temple Bar, knowing I needed to catch an early train home to Galway the next day to be with my family for Easter. 

I grabbed a Supermacs (typical Galway girl, I know) and threw my arm out to hail down the next taxi. The one passing me didn't have his taxi light on, but wasn't carrying any passengers and pulled over to let me in. 

I hopped in, promising not to eat my curry cheese chips until we'd gotten to mine, and gave him my address. He never turned to look at me, which I thought was odd, but I thought hey, maybe he's just not a friendly guy. 

Things started going wrong pretty quickly. The driver kept turning the music up and down really loudly and he was driving erratically, speeding up the car and then slowing it down. I was weirded out, but probably not as much as I should have been. 

When he took the first wrong turn, I was concerned, but assumed he must be taking a short cut. I've lived in Dublin for a few years now, but don't know all the shortcuts.

It was then that things got truly scary. He proceeded to turn down a dimly lit, narrow residential street, and slowed the car down to a crawl. 

I was freaked at this point, and moved to gather up my possessions and kept my eyes firmly on what I could see of him in the dull shadowy glow of a far off street light. 

He moved his right arm down to the side panel of the door, you know the pocket where it's normal to keep a packet of buttons or your driving glasses, and pulled out a cord.

I had my hand on the door handle at this stage, contemplating jumping out of the slow moving car and running to where I knew the nearest Garda stations was. As he wrapped the cord around one hand, and then around the other, pulling a section tight in the middle, I started panicking, all my muscles tensed and ready to whack him with the iPhone I had clutched in my trembling fist. 

He began to turn towards me with both arms, in a move I perceived to be him making an attack to loop the cord around my neck, and at that moment, the door handle in my sweaty left hand slipped through my fingers and made a soft thud against the door. 

He promptly dropped the cord and put his foot down on the accelerator, swinging out of the residential street and onto one I recognised. I clearly wasn't as drunk or unaware as he may have thought I was originally. 

I had no idea what to do. I was scared to tell him to let me out or to scream or shout, in case he then realised that I had seen what he was going to do to me, and decided that he had to go through with it to shut me up. 

We got as close to my address as I could stand to go, I threw the money at him and scrambled out of the car. My legs were shaking so much I didn't know if I would make it down the road and to my door. 

I had taken down his name and driver number and texted them to my friend after he had dropped the cord, in case he tried anything else and I needed someone to know who had done whatever it was he was possibly planning on doing to me. 

The first thing I did when I got home was Google 'taxi driver strangling Dublin unsolved' on my laptop with trembling hands. Nothing came up. 

The next day I left my house to catch my train, and walked past a flurry of seagulls eating the discarded remnants of my Supermacs that had fallen out of the car when I jumped out. 

I told my mum what happened as soon as I saw her, and we decided that I had to call the Guards.

He hadn't touched me or physically harmed me in any way, but I still worried about reporting the incident. 

What if they didn't believe me? Or asked me how much I had to drink? But I knew what I had seen and knew I had to tell them what had happened, just in case it happened to someone else. 

Thankfully, the Garda who took my statement and gently talked me through what had happened never asked me anything that made me feel like I wasn't to be believed. 

The incident is currently under investigation, and while again, nothing actually happened to me physically, I was reassured by the guards fortification that there was something seriously wrong with this situation. 

It was also suggested that the driver had his lights off as he was looking for a suitable passenger, aka a woman alone, and wanted to avoid being flagged down by a group or a bunch of lads. 

I looked up the taxi driver on the Check My Driver app, and I didn't think that the picture it showed resembled what little I had seen of the driver that night. 

It could be been a copied licence, or a stolen licence, or someone driving the legitimate driver's car, or maybe I just didn't see enough of him in the moment he turned towards me to have that jolt of recognition.

Either way, while reminders to check that your driver is legitimate are necessary and valid, the fact that there are ways around it is terrifying, and more needs to be done to make sure that people can get from A to B without being taken advantage of, or worse. 

I have gotten taxis since, but now every time I use the My Taxi app, which has an option to send your journey to a friend, so they can track your journey and check you get home safe. I use it religiously in a morbid ritual, just in case. 

I'm still waiting to hear back if there has been any resolution from the Gardaí, and until then and probably long after, I can foresee myself taking every possible precaution when hopping in a post-night out taxi. 

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So, you may have guessed it by this stage, but we're really, really into gin.

That's why we are SO excited to reveal thatour fair Isle's 'best gin bar' has been announced, and we're planning a road trip.

Galway’s premium art deco and urban style bar, Tribeton won the prestigious title of ‘Best Gin Bar’ in Ireland at the Sky Bar Awards earlier this week. 

Boasting over 146 different domestic and international gins with their own Galway Gin taking pride of place in the vast collection, Tribeton has fast become a destination for gin lovers across the country.

The win coincides with the announcement that Tribeton will be opening a gin SCHOOL next month (say what?), which will offer corporate groups and parties the opportunity to learn more about gin and make a batch each from a personal copper still.

To celebrate the accolade, Tribeton has launched a two person gin tasting platter complete with three exceptional gins and Fevertree tonic – our absolute fave. 

Taking pride of place on the platter will be Galway Gin, naturally.

Made from wild Atlantic seaweed, Galway Gin is light on the nose and unexpectedly refreshing, with underlying notes of lemon – a citrus that links the gins floral and pine start before carrying through to a slightly spicy finish.

We're thirsty just thinking about it. 

The offer, which will cost just €18.50,  will also include celebrated Glendalough Gin served with rosemary and cherry and award winning Thin Gin accompanied by orange and elderflower.

From next week there’s also the option to enjoy new food offerings with each drink from Tribeton’s new Tipsy Tapas menu including  including Salt & pepper squid with burnt orange & Gin aioli and Confit duck leg rillettes with sourdough croutes and Cointreau mayo. 

Soakage, at it's finest. 

Image result for gin gif

Speaking of the restaurant and bars recent success, General Manager of Tribeton, Gerry Kelly said, ‘This is a huge win for Tribeton. To be named ‘Best Gin Bar’ in the whole of Ireland is testimony to the hard work and passion of our bar team and comes at the perfect time with our new gin school about to open.

We encourage locals to drop in and experience our array of gins for themselves and take full advantage of the promotional offers we have on to celebrate this award.’

Bravo, lads. 

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One of Ireland's best-known campaigners has opened up about the moment she had a knife held to her throat during a terrifying home invasion earlier this week.

Speaking to Pat Kenny, Christina Noble explained that she had been sleeping downstairs after being discharged from hospital due to low blood pressure.

The Dubliner, who was the subject of the eponymously named film Nobel in 2014, recalled the moment she realised her life was in danger after waking up to an intruder.

"I turned around, and he took the knife he had in his hand and he put it towards my throat. He held it over my throat viciously," she said.

Christina explained that the intruder demanded money, and repeatedly threatened her.

“I had the alarm, but it only goes off inside the house – it doesn’t go off outside. It didn’t distract him at all. He stayed 12 minutes. He was constantly lunging at me with this knife."

“I went into a very calm state. I just sat there. I didn’t utter a word. I don’t know if it was shock or adrenaline."

Thankfully, Christina managed to hit the panic button installed in her home which caused the intruder to flee, but not before he took her phone and car keys thereby allowing him to exit the scene in Christina's car.

“I’m just very angry that he desecrated my home. I just want people to know there’s some man going around doing this," Christina continued. “I thought people should know what happened, make them more vigilant for themselves.”

The 72-year-old founded the Christina Noble Children's Foundation in 1989, and was made an OBE in 1997.

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Ireland is a country renowned for it's soundness, and 'the people' is often cited as the best thing about living on our little island. 

With all the negative things going on in the world right now, it's important to remember just how sound people in our lives truly are. 

Pieta House have created a brand new campaign to remind us exactly how much the Irish phenomenon of soundness really impacts our day to day lives – and the campaign is about to go viral. 

#SoundEffect is kicking off today in the lead up to and during Electric Picnic, and aims to get the people of Ireland to share how being sound can help our minds and our lives on the daily.

From grabbing your work wife a Starbucks on your way to work to simply being there for someone when they need you, little acts of soundness can create a wave of positivity. 

'Considering the levels of apathy and negativity we are constantly exposed to, and which can become at times overwhelming, it’s important to highlight the empathy, inherent goodness and level of social consciousness that exist throughout the vast majority of society. Now more than ever,' said Paula McLoughlin, Chair and Acting CEO of A Lust For Life. 

If you have an act of soundness to contribute, head over to Twitter and use the hashtag #SoundEffect to spread the positivity.

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The hype has been building up for weeks now, and with the fight mere days away, Deliveroo has managed to find a way to intensify the excitement surrounding the McGregor vs Mayweather clash.

With the highly-publicised event due to air on Irish television from midnight this Saturday, the good folk at Deliveroo realised that the people of Ireland would likely be crying out for a snack or two in the early hours of Sunday morning.

And with that in mind, they made the decision to extend their delivery hours, meaning that Irish fans can tuck into a whole host of grub while watching Conor McGregor take on Floyd Mayweather at the billion-dollar fight.

Commenting on the stellar marketing move, General Manager of Deliveroo Ireland, Liam Keenan said: "The McGregor versus Mayweather fight will no doubt be a big TV moment for Ireland."

"We’re thrilled that our customers in Dublin who are watching the fight will be able to satisfy their late-night munchies through Deliveroo from a selection of well known participating restaurants."

Supermac’s, Eddie Rocket’s, Papa John’s, Burritos & Blues, Abrakebabra and Aleena India in Dublin city centre will be participating in the extended hours.

And that's the early hours of Sunday morning sorted, ladies.

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