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You are here: Home / Dublin / Watching the Eurovision back in Ireland

Watching the Eurovision back in Ireland

May 14, 2018 by EmmaP Leave a Comment

The week of May 7th saw the lead up to this year’s Eurovision song contest – and Ireland’s strong entry (for once). It suddenly hit me that it would be quite exciting for me and my family of foreigners to watch it here, having followed it before from Italy and Norway – and with my Canadian husband now a big fan. I wrote this piece for publication in the Irish Times the day before the competition final.

After many years abroad, it’s my first year back home in Dublin and Ireland has made it to the final of the Eurovision song contest. Finally! On Saturday I’ll settle down to watch it together with my family of foreigners. We’ve never really followed the X-Factor or TV dance-shows, but every May we more than make up for it, wherever in the world we happen to be living.

This year we’ll have the huge luxury of turning on the telly in the corner and being able to flick back and forth between RTE and BBC. We won’t have to magically conjure up Graham Norton through the laptop, playing his brilliant commentary over the poor-quality picture of our local Norwegian or Italian TV, putting up with a two-second delay.

I loved to watch it as a child, and now it’s even more fun with my own kids, though no-one enjoys it more than my husband: he grew up in Canada and once he finally caught on to it, he’s been boring his nonplussed friends back home with explanations of its appeal.

Read the full story on the Irish Times online.

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Filed Under: Dublin, Family, Moving to Ireland, Norway Tagged With: Eurovision

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Wash Your Language

Wash Your Language

Musings on language and daily life in Ireland with memories from Canada, Italy and Norway

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A few coincidences.As I walked past our local takeaway today, I spotted this manhole cover at my feet. It commemorates an event on the Dublin Easter Rising of 1916 - which was marked today, as always, on Easter Monday, 109 years later. The image shows the man who first raised the Irish Republic flags on the roof of the GPO, one of the main buildings held by the rebels that week. His name was Éamonn Bulfin, he was about 24 and along with many others, he was arrested and sentenced to death by the British authorities when the rising was quashed. But the Argentine ambassador intervened, because Éamonn was an Argentinian citizen - so he was deported instead, back to Buenos Aires. He had been born there in 1892 to 2 Irish parents who had emigrated to Argentina and had 5 kids. The family moved back to Ireland (presumably by slow boat over many weeks) when he was about 10. He went to St. Enda's School, became a fluent Irish speaker and a republican and so got involved in the Rising.After being deported back to BA after the rising, the Argentine government felt the need to arrest him for "skipping out on military service" though it was probably trying to appease the British government who they were already fighting with over the Falkland Islands. This is 1917.After 2 years in prison, Éamonn moved to Ireland again after independence, after doing a stint as the first ambassador of the new Irish state to Argentina. Why? Because Argentina absorbed tons of Irish emigrants - today it's thought 500k to 1 million Argentinians claim Irish heritage!He farmed in Offaly, wrote short stories in English and Spanish, moved to Donnybrook when he retired and after he died in 1968 (buried near Birr) a road in Inchicore was named after him.Oh and one of his sisters married Sean McBride who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1974 for co-founding Amnesty International.And, of course today Argentina is in the news today as dear old Papa Francesco came from Buenos Aires (Italian heritage) though I also just learned that he never went back to that city after becoming pope.So that's the manhole cover that pops up in a few places around Ireland, and outside our local takeaway.(Photo from Society for Irish Latin American Studies) #EasterRising #manholecover #irishhistory ... See MoreSee Less

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Wash my language?

Språkvask is the Norwegian word for proofing text. Literally it means “language wash”; a more poetic way of saying it!

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