Amuri offers authentic Sicilian cuisine in the heart of Dublin. Winner of 2024 Innovator of the Year at the Irish Restaurant Awards. Book your table today.
The RIAM offers junior, pre-college, undergraduate and postgraduate musical training of the highest standards. RIAM Exams assess and support the learning and development of young musicians and their committed teachers throughout the island of Ireland.
Theatre in the heart of Dublin, Ireland. The latest stand-up, music gigs, concerts and entertainment touring Ireland. Dame St, Central City. Opposite Dublin Castle, 5 mins walk from Grafton Street, 15 mins walk from O'Connell Street.
A podcast for people who don’t get out much and can’t handle it when they do.A refuge for the clumsy and the awkward.Join Bill Nighy to squander some time as he attempts to answer your questions and dilemmas without actually making things worse.If you have questions about anything – from choosing the right shirt to how to hide at parties, please send us a voice-note via Instagram @illadvisedbybillnighyThere will also be a recommended book and a ‘playlist of the week’ and given that Bill is making this up as he goes along, who knows what other features might develop.He would further like to add that he knows you have busy lives and wants you to feel free to ignore this podcast Stay looseProduced by Alice Williams & Ciara Gregory with assistant production by Angelique Somers. Cover image by Charlie Gray. Artwork by Anna Davie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Since its launch in 2013, the Valletta Baroque Festival has treated audiences to a unique event featuring some of the best soloists and ensembles in the baroque music scene. Taking as its main venue one of the oldest working theatres in the world, Teatru Manoel, this prestigious two-week festival also plays out within many wonderful baroque and historical venues, such as St. John's Co-Cathedral, and The Verdala Palace.
Pro-Israel Right adopts Leftist tactics to silence opponents - UnHerd
Throughout the 2010s and early 2020s, Right-wingers frequently mocked the rhetoric and concepts popularised by the “woke Left”. They argued that ideas such as microaggressions, safe spaces, and pervasive claims of victimhood were being used to suppress free speech in academia and justify DEI programmes under the guise of anti-racism and “equity”. Yet now, in [...]Read More...