On hiatus last week due to being in Manchester for the match. This was taken in a pub there:

Think Pink
I’d seen Ballygowen’s Think Pink campaign before but I’m glad to see it’s getting an additional push this week (14th – 20th February) in aid of Breast Cancer Awareness and the Marie Keating Foundation. College students and office workers all over the country will be ‘Thinking Pink’, by wearing a pink accessory or by sporting a pink outfit, to show their support and help raise funds for foundation. The pink Ballygowan bottle, which is now a permanent part of the range, has already raised over 200K for the Marie Keating Foundation. I admire what the foundation have done in spreading awareness as it’s not a job with a definable end point. Fair play to all involved.
Girl Talk – All Day

I haven’t listened to an album more in the past three months than Girl Talk’s All Day. The album mashes up urban/hip-hop vocal samples with track backing from a-ha, Bananarama, Blondie, James Brown, Jackson 5 and a hundred others. It’s a stunning piece of work and the best part? It’s free. Download and enjoy my friends.
Jameson Dublin International Film Festival 2011

If there’s one festival more than any other that I’ve attended in recent years, it’s the Jameson Dublin International Film Festival. I went along to the launch event on Tuesday evening in Tripod to get the lowdown. Running from the 17th – 27th February, the 2011 programme features over 130 screenings plus a myriad of special events, panel discussions, public interviews and industry masterclasses. It’s a tribute to the hard work of the festival team and sponsors that they’ve managed to pull together one of the best lineups the festival has ever seen. It’s even more of an an achievement when funding for the arts has been hit as much as it has over the past year couple of years.
Launching the festival programme were award-winning actors Maura Tierney (ER, Liar Liar), who is currently in Dublin for rehearsals of God of Carnage at The Gate Theatre, and Charlene McKenna (Raw, Dorothy Mills). The festival opens strongly with a debut Gala Screening of Richard Ayoade’s (The IT Crowd, The Mighty Boosh) Submarine. Audiences will also be treated to a succession of Irish premieres, including: George Nolfi’s action-packed The Adjustment Bureau starring Matt Damon; Emilio Estevez’s second film starring Martin Sheen, The Way; the tense thriller Unknown, starring Liam Neeson and Aidan Quinn; Irish film Wake Wood from the legendary Hammer Films starring Aidan Gillen, Eva Birthistle and Timothy Spall; Ken Loach’s thriller Route Irish, set on the most dangerous road in Iraq, and his son Jim Loach’s first feature Oranges and Sunshine as well as two of the shortlisted films for best foreign language Oscar, Incendies (Canada) and Life, Above All (South Africa).
