Browsing Tag

Top 10

News

Top Ten Stories of 2013

Gareth Haughey

Gareth Haughey. He once was lost, but then was found.

However many years ago we started irishphiladelphia.com—and I’m thinking eight years, come this February—a reporter who interviewed Denise and me asked a dumb question: What are you going to write about after shamrocks and beer?

Idiot.

For one thing, we have a “no shamrock” rule. Shamrocks are cliche. We avoid cliches. As for beer, we’re all in favor of it. Beer has its merits. But Irish drunkenness is also a cliche—most of the time, anyway—so, once again, we choose not to dwell on it.

The point is, there’s always something new and different to write about. You people are just plain interesting.

Want proof? Check out our top 10 stories of 2013. They’re the stories make us proud—not just of our work, but mostly to know all of you.

They’re not in any particular order of importance that really would have been too hard.

1.

A Tribute to a Man Who Made Everyone Feel Important

Denise Foley

Charlie Dunlop, a native of County Tyrone who lived in Havertown, died of a sudden heart attack on November 28, 2011, at the age of 45, leaving behind a wife and small son. He was everybody’s friend, a man whose kindness to others—even people who knew him only casually—simply knew no bounds. Last March, 500 of those friends and acquaintances paid $100 apiece to attend a banquet, the proceeds of which went to continue Charlie’s good works.

2.

Philadelphia Loves Jane

Denise Foley

Seven-year-old Jane Richard, a budding Irish dancer, lost her leg in the Boston Marathon bombing. Jane’s brother, Martin, 8, was one of three people killed in the blast which also injured her mother, Denise. Philadelphia’s Irish dance community, the St. Patrick’s Day parade director Michael Bradley, IBEW Business Manager John Dougherty and many others organized a campaign to help defray the Richard families considerable medical costs.

3.

A Message from the Heart

Jeff Meade

Irish Center regular Tom Staunton had his day in the sun on a Saturday in September, when the center’s picturesque Fireside Room was transformed into a set for a commercial for Penn Medicine. Staunton, who’d been under treatment for the heart flutter known as atrial fibrillation, underwent a pioneering procedure at Penn designed to rope of the section of the heart responsible for the notoriously difficult-to-treat flutter. The commercial went live in October.

4.

Denise Foley

This one is a two-fer.

Last September 12, someone broke into Tyrone-born musician Raymond Coleman’s van in the Port Richmond section, and made off with all of his equipment—his guitars, his sound system, even guitar cables. It didn’ t take long before Frank Daly, front man for Jamison Celtic Rock and co-founder of American Paddy LLC, had launched a crowd-sourcing campaign to help Coleman replace all of the lost equipment. It didn’t take too long before enough cash had been replaced to help him out of a bad spot—and even get him a better sound system than the one he had before the break-in. In November, Coleman held a big thank-you concert at the Plough and Stars.

5.

Jeff Meade

Another two-fer.

World-famous artist Chuck Connelly channelled all of his sorrow and rage over the Sandy Hook school shootings into a 10- by 12-foot masterpiece honoring the 20 children who died in the tragedy. This month, to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the shooting, Villanova University displayed Connelly’s masterwork—the first major institution to have done so.

6. 

Jeff Meade

Last two-parter, we promise.

On September 27, Gareth “Gaffer” Haughey—an Armagh native living in Upper Darby—went missing. The longer he was away, the more alarmed his many friends became. They met at the Irish Immigration Center to organize a massive search. On October 16, days before the search was to begin, Haughey suddenly materialized, no worse for wear. His friends were greatly relieved—although Immigration Center director Siobhan Lyons quipped, “they’re also lining to slap him for being so much trouble.”

7. 

Lorna Byrne: Blessed By the Angels

Lori Lander Murphy

Lorna Byrne, Lori Lander Murphy wrote, “sees angels the way most of us see other people; to her, these ethereal beings are a very solid physical manifestation. And, she assures us, every single one of us has our own guardian angel following us at all times.” On St. Patrick’s Day—a day typically more secular than sacred—Lori attended an event at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Church in Chestnut Hill at which Byrne brought peace and comfort to all who attended. A fitting end to a day dedicated to a a saint’s memory.

8. 

Looking for Help for the Families of Political Prisoners

Denise Foley 

“Port Richmond born-and-bred” carpenter and former Ancient Order of Hibernians president Jim Lockhart is a lifelong Irish republican. He’s always been involved in Irish causes, but three years ago he became involved in fund-raising for a non-political group Friends of Irish Freedom, an organization that helps the families of Irish political prisoners. “With their mothers and fathers gone, these children go without,” he told Denise Foley, “so we try to help.”

9.

Around the World With Bagpipes

Denise Foley

A great little profile from Denise: “For the last 25 years, whenever someone needs a bagpiper, it’s Charlie Rutan they call. He’s the owner of Bagpipes FAO (For All Occasions), supplying solo and group pipers and pipe bands for every conceivable event from weddings and funerals to store openings and retirement parties. On the face of it, it doesn’t seem like a lucrative career choice, but you’d be surprised how busy a bagpipe business can be.”

10.

The Artist Behind the Harp

Denise Foley

Another great profile, this one about one of our very favorite people, harpist Ellen Formanek Tepper—who also happens to be a very gifted artist whose specialty is inspired by minutiae from illuminated gospels created by 9th century Irish monks> She paints them on glass. “I call it taking minutiae and make them huge and bringing light to the Dark Ages.”

Music

Top 10 Irish Songs You’ve Never Heard

An image of a Leprechaun playing electric guitar.You think you’ve heard them all. We’re here to tell you otherwise, Mister Smarty Breeches Full of Stitches.

From the home office in Horseleap, County Offaly, the official irishphiladelphia.com Top 10 Irish Songs You’ve Never Heard:

1.  Black Velcro Band. She just doesn’t want to lose that band.
2.  I’ll Tell Me Grandma. Ma never listens to me, anyway.
3.  Danny Man. An Irish fella with a Peter Pan complex.
4.  Dirtiest Old Town. Fresno.
5.  I Knew My Love. Until she threw me over for a tennis pro.
6.  I Wish That I Was Never Wed. OK, you’ve heard this one, but now you know why.
7.   It’s a Long Way to Kensington and Allegheny. But make a left turn at St. Adalbert’s Rectory, cross Aramingo and Frankford, and you’re there.
8.   Kelly the Boy From Kensington and Allegheny. Hey, do we really have to tell you how to find that guy?
9.   Smoggy Dew. Fresno, again.
10. Molly Maloneski. “Crying, pierogis and galumpkis, alive, alive, oh …”

Columns

Top 10 Ways to Get Over St. Patrick’s Day

Oh, the bed spins!

And what’s that sweet, cinnamon and coconut aftertaste lingering on my swollen, velour-clad tongue? Oh yes … candy Irish potatoes. I seem to recall consuming my entire body weight (and then some) in Irish potatoes. When was that? Was it yesterday? Two weeks ago?

Perhaps I am emerging from a diabetic coma. But no, that can’t be it. Something else …

I remember some things, but my recollections are all out of synch, and the frozen images flash through my mind like a PowerPoint presentation produced by Keith Richards on a bad day:

Blood sausages. And God help me, I am eating one. (Click.)

Yellow plastic-clad dancers tapping up 16th Street in a monsoon. (Click.)

Hairy men in kilts singing “C’mon Eileen” at the top of their lungs. It’s like a bad record. Well, of course it was a bad record. (Click.)

A conga line of drunk people snaking down Second Street. Shiny green plastic Mardi Gras beads are strung about their necks, and they’re wearing T-shirts emblazoned with tasteful slogans like “Bite me, I’m Irish” and “Rub my shamrocks for luck.” (Click.)

A crowd, no, a host of flashing plastic shamrock deely bobbers, fluttering and dancing in the breeze, tossing their heads in sprightly dance. Poetic, yes, but really, really weird. (Click.)

A bagpipe band playing “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy?” Hell, no, I don’t! Oh, please, for the love of God and all that is holy, just please stop! (Click.)

Ah, but I do know what this is. It’s all coming back to me. I have been down this road before. And even though I always tell myself, “no, nay, never, no more,” I know I will go there again. This, dear friends, is your brain on St. Patrick’s Day.

Any questions?

As you emerge from the kelly green-tinged haze, you may wonder, as I often have, can I ever become normal again? (Was I ever normal in the first place?) And why is that accordion player staring at me with a knowing grin?

Don’t give up hope. To aid in your recovery, we offer not 12 steps, but 10.

From the home office in Horseleap, County Offaly, the official irishphiladelphia.com Top 10 Ways to Get Over St. Patrick’s Day:

  1. Order Chinese food. Szechuan ham and cabbage is not allowed.
  2. Realize that the road did not rise up to meet you. You just fell down.
  3. Walk into Finnegan’s Wake and order a perky little wine spritzer.
  4. Have your begorrah surgically removed.
  5. Stake out a spot on the Parkway for the Pulaski Day parade. It’s not until October, but you can’t be too early.
  6. Recognize that’s it’s more than just a hangover. It’s PTSD: Post Too-Ra-Loo-Ra-Loo-Ral Stress Disorder.
  7. Seek help for an Irish ballad lasting four hours or longer, as this could be a sign of a serious medical condition.
  8. Watch the worst Irish movie ever, “Far and Away,” starring Tom Cruise. It’ll put you off anything Irish. Because of this movie, Ireland joined the European Union … as Belgium.
  9. Check into the Bog Down in the Valley-O Rehab Center of Malibu, California.
  10. Henceforth, refer to anyone named Seamus as Luigi.
News

Top 10 Things NOT to Do at an Irish Music Event

As we approach the beginning of the 33rd Annual Philadelphia Ceili Group Irish Festival, we thought it might be helpful to explain some of the basic rules of Irish music etiquette for the uninitiated (with a tip of the hat to David Letterman).

From the home office in Horseleap, County Offaly, the official Irish Philadelphia Top 10 Things Not to Do at an Irish Music Event:

1. Flick your lighter and yell “Free Bird!”
2. Sing “di-dee-di-dee-di-dee-di” just like the guys on “Whose Line Is It, Anyway?”
3. Ask, “Is that a tin whistle in your pocket, or are you just glad to see me?
4. Yodel along to everything
5. The wave
6. To everyone you run into, say, “Top o’ the marnin’ to ye” just like Barry Fitzgerald
7. After every verse of “Si Bheag Si Mhor,” sigh loudly, look at your watch and ask: Is it over yet?”
8. The Electric Slide
9. When singing “She Moved through the Fair,” croon “ohhhhh, baby, baby” in a Barry White voice
10. Play the bodhran