Connected has proven to be one of the big olâ hits of RTEâs autumn season. Setting out to deliver a snapshot of what life is like in Ireland in 2014 for six women, the show has gathered rave reviews and dedicated audiences as the series has progressed.
What has had many glued to the screen is how the series has flipped many reality TV conventions. At this stage of the game, we know reality TVâs tropes and tricks insideout and back to front and weâre a mite fed up of them, as the ratings for many shows demonstrate.
But Connected puts control of the cameras in the hands of the participants. Each of the six women decide what and when to film, meaning they direct their own scenes. Instead of scenes which are contrived for the cameras, we get searing honesty and real worlds.
At Banter, weâll look at the success of the show from the point of view of some of those who took part, the people who commissioned the show at RTE and TV veterans who have become fans of the show.
Were peope enthusiastic or reserved about the first approach? What did they expect? What did they think of reality TV shows before? What are the plans for the show now? Whatâs been the participantsâ reaction to the critical praise? And what nexts for the participants and the show?
Brite Space Dublin is a week-long series of discussions and activities from Eventbrite that will explore the future of events and Banter will join the party on Monday November 17 for a conversation with sports agent and Platinum One boss, Fintan Drury.
Formerly a news and current affairs journalist at RTE, Fintan moved into PR and sports managements in the early 1990s. Platinum One has a formidable client list, especially when it comes to football and rugby representing the likes of Johnny Sexton, Gordon DâArcy, Sean OâBrien and over 70 professional footballers in Britain. Itâs also the agency of choice for some of the worldâs biggest sports clubs when it comes to tours, training camps and friendly matches, has huge experience in the management of golf events (such as the 2006 Ryder Cup) and is deeply involved in many aspects of Gaelic games.
Weâll talk to Fintan about his role as an agent, his observations on the changing face of professional sport, his views on how the expectations of sportsmen and women have changed as more money comes into play, the places where he sees untapped potential, how he and his fellow agents deal with would-be partners and his thoughts on Irelandâs relationship with professional sports events and sports tourism.
Banterâs conversation with Fintan Drury takes place on Monday November 17 at 6.30pm at 42 Dawson St., Dublin 2. Admission is free but tickets needs to be reserved in advance here. Complimentary beer will be provided by McGargles Irish Family Brewers and there will also be complimentary non-alcoholic options.
The Banter bandwagon is hitting the road again this month and the Marble City is where weâre going. Savour Kilkenny is now in its eighth year and will be providing cooking demonstrations from chefs like Rory OâConnell, Brian McDermott and Kevin Dundon, tastings, fine dining events and various other sideshows (we like the sound of the Spud & Hurl race) in the city from October 24 to 27.
Weâre hosting four panels over the weekend, all in the National Craft Gallery where we hosted a Banter session about Irish fashion at last yearâs Arts Festival. Youâll find a bunch of food writers and commentators talking and musing about a whole range of topics.
Saturday October 25
Writing about Food (12.30pm)
Being able to put together a great recipe is one thing, writing it in a way which makes the reader want to reach for their spices and larder staples is quite another. While we all canât be Nigel Slater, there is a definite upswing for people who can combine good writing with great food. An A to Z guide from Dee Laffan and Catherine Cleary about what it takes to turn a great dish into a great read.
What will we be eating this time next year? (2.30pm)
Description: A decade ago, youâd have been hard pressed to find ripe avocados or padron peppers in the aisles of your local supermarket. Go back even further in time and the list of foods which we now take for granted would be completely absent from the weekly shop. Chalk it down to more sophisticated palattes and widespread travel and the influence of such foodies as Yotam Ottolenghi and Thomasina Myers, but weâre far more savvy eaters in 2014. As we reach peak burrito time, we ask Yvonne Carty, Aoife Ryan and Marie Claire Digby to tell us what comes next for our palattes.
Sunday October 26
War Stories from the Kitchen (12.30pm)
Are the people who start cafes and restaurants mad, driven, crazy, otherwise unemployable or all of the above? Meet some of the people whoâve already gone through all of those sleepless nights, stressful months and successful times to find out what drove them to open their doors to the public â and the restaurant reviewers who reveal what attracts them to a restaurant, what they like and what they dislike. The panel: Denise McBrien (Pichet, Dublin), John Healy (RTE The Restaurant), Paul OâConnor and Blathnaid Bergin (School of Restaurant & Kitchen Management).
Whatâs on your plate? (2.30pm)
Itâs a question which more and more people are asking as issues of food miles, provenance and health become more commonplace. But in an age when huge reductions in the price of food mean weâve never had to pay less for the basics, do we actually give any thought to why those sweet potatoes or that chicken cost so little? Fiona Dillon and  Yvonne Carty will discuss and dissect these points.
Admission to all the Banter panels at Savour Kilkenny are free of charge. Youâll find the full programme for the weekend here. Big thanks to Marian Flannery, Paul OâConnor, Rose Mulvey and the Savour team for the invite and their help with this.
Over the course of the last year, Banterâs ongoing Living for the City series has delved into many nooks and crannies of living, working and playing in Dublin in the 21st century, from transport, media and housing to food and immigration. Weâve had really strong turn-outs for all of these events, with the audience keen to get stuck in and have their say (as was also the case with last nightâs discussion around privacy).
One of the topics which has bubbled to the surface a few times in many of the discussion panels has been the state of creativity in the city. There are many who will agree with Una Mullallyâs recent opinion column that the capital is becoming âa twee, beige place, devoid of spontaneity and creative riskâ, thanks to the departure of young Dubliners for other cities and a reduction in spaces in which to be adventurous.
But there are many others who would point to the fact that thereâs a hell of a lot going on in Dublin right now right across the artistic, cultural and entertainment boards and, as has always been the case, you just need to go look for it. Just as the city has always had its âDublin is deadâ proponents (1990sâ band Puppy Love Bomb even had a t-shirt bearing that slogan), it has also always had its share of people doing stuff, be it underground ventures of old or the pop-up events of today. And yes, the latter coterie of do-ers includes plenty of twentysomethings.
As part of the The Beatyard citywide festival, Banter presents an evening for poking and prodding to see if Dublin still has a creative edge â or if it ever had one to begin with â whatâs going on beneath the surface in arts and culture, where the bottlenecks are and whatâs on the way.
Banter panel: Una Mullally (The Irish Times, TG4’s Ceol Ar An Imeall), Sinead Kelly (Hunt & Gather), Dave Smith (Mabos) and Richard Seabrooke (creative director Thinkhouse, founder Offset). Contributions from the audience are, as always, welcome
Date, time and venue: Wednesday October 22, Twisted Pepper (Middle Abbey St., Dublin 1), doors open 6pm, Bantering begins 6.30pm. Limited invite list and tickets here.
After two visits to the town in 2013, the Banter series of talks and interviews returns to the Co Cork town for the Kinsale Arts Festival in September. Weâve sessions covering food, music, gardening and film-making and cracking guests for you to meet on Saturday and Sunday 27 and 28 September.
Master chef at work. Rory OâConnell has spent over 20 years cooking in the worldâs finest kitchens alongside leading chefs and cooking advocates, including Nico Ladenis at Chez Nico, London, Raymond Blanc at Le Manoir aux Quat Saisons in Oxford, Alice Waters at Chez Panisse, California and Mrytle Allen at Ballmaloe House. Rory co-founded the Ballymaloe Cookery School with his sister, Darina Allen, and is also festival director of the Ballymaloe Literary Festival. His first book, âMaster It: How to Cook Todayâ won the Andre Simon Award for Best Cook Book 2013.
Meet the gardener. Mary Reynolds, who won a gold medal at the Chelsea Flower Show in 2002 for her Celtic Sanctuary Irish wildflower garden, is a designer who seeks to create landscapes which are expressions of each individual place. A film about Maryâs story called Wild â which was written and directed by Vivienne de Courcy, stars Emma Greenwell amd Tom Hughes and was partly shot in west Cork â is due for release in 2015.
CĂșil Aodha calling. Iarla Ă LionĂĄird is a singer, songwriter and musician with an unique voice and approach. Whether as a member of the Afro Celt Sound System and, more recently, the wonderful Irish-American band The Gloaming or as part of a plethora of other projects and collaborations from Ghost Trio and Crash Ensemble to work alongside Nico Muhly, Gavin Bryars, Dan Trueman and David Lang as well as film credits for Hotel Rwanda, Calavary and others, Iarla has long exhibited highly individual artistic ambitions when it comes to Irish music.
Pat Collins is a Cork-born filmmaker who has directed over two dozen acclaimed documentaries since leaving the work of criticism (he edited Film West magazine) and film festivals (Galway Film Fleadh programmer). He has won multiple awards for work which includes Michael Hartnett: A Necklace of Wrens, OileĂĄn ThoraĂ, Marooned, Gabriel Byrne â Stories From Home and Pilgrim. In 2012, he released his first feature drama, Silence, about a sound recordist returning to Ireland for the first time in 15 years to take up a job recording landscapes free from man-made sound. His most recent work is Living In A Coded Land, a superb vivid look at the people and places of the Irish Midlands
Selling Irish food to the masses (Sunday 1.30pm The Black Pig)
A conversation with Sully (Cully & Sully) and Kieran Murphy (Murphyâs Ice Cream) about the business of food. How do you get a new food brand off the ground? What kind of work and research is involved in moving beyond just local sales and reach? What are the ups and downs on turning your food into a brand? What lessons are to be learned from scaling up?
Full information on all sessions and everything else going on at the festival from September 19 to 28Â here. Big thanks to Marie McParlin and all at the festival for the return invitation to the town and their help in putting this on.
If it’s September, it’s time to go back to the Twisted Pepper. Itâs been a while since we did a Banter in our spiritual home on Middle Abbey Street but we’re back in situ for what is looking like an action-packed autumn-winter schedule.
Our first night out for the autumn, the latest in the ongoing Living for the City series on living, working and playing in the capital, is a look at the cityâs new-school cafes. A huge number of cafes have opened in the city in the recent while and it seems as if more are opening or expanding with every passing week. Where has this growth come from, whatâs behind it and whatâs next as taste buds get more adventurous?
Our panel of cafe fanatics are Maisha Lenehan (Bibis), Barry Stephens (147),Aisling Rogerson (The Fumbally) and Ketty Elisabeth (French Foodie In Dublin). You can check out Kettyâs photos and reviews of these cafes and dozens more in the city here.
The small print: Banter on Dublinâs cafe society takes place on Wednesday September 24 at the Twisted Pepper (Middle Abbey St., Dublin 1). Doors open at 6pm and the Bantering gets underway at 6.30pm. There is a limited free guestlist available and you can sign up for it here.
It’s our second year in a row at CultureTECH, the week-long messy celebration of creative innovation which runs in Derry from September 15 to 21. We had a fantastic time at the festival last year â and weâve also enjoyed ourselves enormously on visits to the Maiden City with Other Voices in ‘13 and â14 â so it was an easy decision to say yes when we got the call from Mark Nagurski to come to the northwest again.
The event will take place at the historic St Augustineâs, Palace Street, Derry on Culture Night, Friday September 19 from 7pm. Admission is free, but advance booking is required and can be done here.
After various adventures over the last two years in Derry, Dingle and London, Banter is delighted to join Other Voices as they head into the woods at Stradbally Hall on their first ever visit to Co Laois and the Electric Picnic. By comparison, this is the third Picnic in a row for Banter, though we’re swapping our usual digs with Naoise Nunn and Mindfield for Other Voices’ bijou tent in the woods.
On Saturday afternoon (4pm, Other Voices tent), Melvin Benn (Festival Republic) and Philip King (Other Voices) will join me to talk about the yin and yang of the modern festival. Weâll look at the long-term history of these musical feasts, how festivals have changed over the past decade or so, the new eclecticism which reigns at the better events, the differences in festival culture between countries and the future for these events.
A talk about festivals at a festival within a festival â prepare for the most meta hour of your weekend. There will also be a very special musical guest too who we canât tell you about quite yet but, trust us, it will be worth it.
It’s time for Banter to go back to Limerick and the Make A Move festival. We were here two years ago for a great discussion about Irish hip-hop and it’s a pleasure to get the invitation from Shane MacCurtain and team.
The big question, though, is what comes next. When the circus leaves town at midnight on December 31, will Limerick cease to be a city of culture? Does a city like Limerick need a city of culture designation to show off its wares? Isn’t culture supposed to be more about bed nights? What will Limerick remember most from and take from 2014’s cultural parade? Will we remember this year in a year solely for reports, spats, costs and inventive use of an old dairy?
We’ve gathered a panel of local artists and activists to join us at Banter to discuss all of the above (and more besides) and we will hopefully not mention the legacy word all that much.
Banter presents Limerick City of Culture 2015 takes place at the Shannon Rowing Club (Shannon Bridge) on Friday July 4 at 7.30pm. Admission is free. Big thanks to Shane Curtain and Jennifer Moroney Ward for their help in putting this together.Â
Make A Move takes place in various venues across Limerick from July 3 to 6. See website for full information.
Itâs a Frank special. A few weeks ago, Banter was packed to the rafters for the visit of Jon Ronson who talked at great length about Frank Sidebottom and the true story which inspired the forthcoming Frank film.
This time around, weâre delighted to welcome the filmâs director Lenny Abrahamson, actor Domhnall Gleeson and music composer Stephen Rennicks to Banter on Thursday May 1 to talk about all things Frank.
Lenny Abrahamson, who has form when it comes to Banter, has previously directed such magnificent flicks as Adam and Paul, Garage and What Richard Did.
Domhnall Gleeson, who appears in Frank as wannabe Jon Burroughs who finds himself out of his depth when he joins an avant-garde pop band led by the enigmatic Frank, has previously appeared in About Time, Anna Karenina, Calvary, Sensation, True Grit and many other films.
Stephen Rennicks is the Dublin-based composer whose compositions for feature films include The Stag, The Pipe, Happy Ever Afters, Eden and work on all of Lenny Abrahamsonâs films to date.
The credits:Â Banterâs conversation about Frank takes place at the Twisted Pepper (Middle Abbey St., Dublin 1) on Thursday May 1. Doors open 6pm and the conversation gets underway at 6.30pm sharp. Tickets can be obtained here
A conversation about Frank is brought to you in association with Element Pictures. Frank opens in cinemas on May 9
Banter’s Living for the City series on living, working and playing in Dublin in the 21st century continues to motor along. Weâve had discussions to date on cycling in the city, alternative spaces, immigration, housing and homelessness and we still havenât even begun to scratch the surface of stuff around and about Dublin that we want to discuss.
Our latest excursion into capital city issues is Covering the City, a look at media in the city as part of The Beatyard festival.
Covering the City will look at how various media â new, old, online and offline â cover whatâs going on in the city. Weâll examine what the panel feels is of interest to Dubliners about the place they call home. And weâll talk some about the other stuff which should be covered and why.
The small print: Covering the City takes place at the Twisted Pepper on Wednesday April 30. Doors open 6pm, the Bantering gets underway at 6.30pm and admission is free, but you need to sign-up to the invite list in dvance.
Weâve one more Banter-related announcement to come this week, but today is all about our first visit to the CĂșirt International Festival of Literature in Galway in April.
Banter will be hosting three events in all on Saturday April 12
Coffee and Cronuts with Sam Lipsyte: an interview with one of Americaâs best and funniest fiction writers. Have a coffee, enjoy a cronut and hear what Sam has to say about the art of sardonic writing (and cronuts). Busker Brownes, 11am, admission âŹ8
The Music Book Club: what do musicians read? Who are their favourite writers? What effect, if any, do those writers have on their songs and music. Join us for some book chat with special guests Adrian Crowley, NĂal Conlon from Delorentos and Maria Doyle Kennedy. Roisin Dubh, 3pm, âŹ8
Facts about fiction with Rhianna Pratchett. An award-winning scriptwriter, story designer and general narrative paramedic, Rhianna has worked on such titles as Tomb Raider, Heavenly Sword, Overlord, Bioshock Infinite and Mirrorâs Edge, as well as a plethora of screenplays and comics. She joins us to talk about the nuts and bolts of how to tell stories in games, develop a narrative and collaborate with a team. An Taibhdhearc, 5pm âŹ8
You can find full details of the rest of the CĂșirt programme â including Hugo Hamilton, Sebastian Barry, Roddy Doyle, Kathleen McMahon, Anakana Schofield, Colin Barrett, Patrick deWitt, recent Banter guests Donal Ryan and Eimear McBride and many, many more â here
Weâre as pleased as punch to welcome Damian Barr to Banter for a special evening about his book Maggie & Me. Damian is the latest literary prize-winner to join Donal Ryan and Eimear McBride in the Banter Hall of Fame, as Maggie & Me was voted political humour and satire book of the year at the Political Book Awards in London earlier this week. The critical praise for Maggie & Me has been loud and lavish too since its publication.
Maggie & Me is the touching and darkly witty memoir about a yongster surviving Thatcherâs Britain; a story of growing up gay in a straight world and coming out the other side in spite of, and maybe because of, the iron lady. Itâs a tale of a family divided by sectarian suspicion in a community held together by a sprawling steelworks. As Maggie snatches school milk, smashes the unions and makes greed good, our hero works hard, plans his escape and â in spite of violence, strikes, AIDS and Clause 28 â manages to fall in love dancing to Madonna in Glasgowâs only gay club.
Aside from Maggie & Me, Damian has been a journalist for over ten years writing mostly for The Times, but also the Independent, Telegraph, Financial Times, Guardian, Evening Standard and Granta. He is the author of Get It Together: A Guide to Surviving Your Quarterlife Crisis and has co-written two plays for BBC Radio 4. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, Faculty at the School of Life, host of the infamous Literary Salon at Shoreditch House and was named Writer of the Year at the 2013 Stonewall Awards.
An evening with Damian Barr takes place at the Twisted Pepper (Middle Abbey St.,) Dublin 1 on Wednesday April 2. Doors open at 6pm-ish and the conversation with Damian gets underway at 6.30pm. Admission is free and you can sign up to the limited invite list here.
Next month, we also present a conversation with writer, TV presenter and columnist Dawn OâPorter. Sheâll be here to talk about her new book for young adults Goose, the follow-up to last yearâs well-received debut novel Paper Aeroplanes.
Aside from these books, Dawn is also the editor of The Booby Trap And Other Bits And Boobs (a compilation of stories by well-known people in aid of breast cancer charities), the presenter of a rake of TV shows about all sorts of things from polygamy to the movie Dirty Dancing for the BBC, Channel 4, ITV, Sky and FIVE in the UK, and WE TV and TLC in the US â her next appearance will be on This Old Thing, a Channel 4 series on vintage clothes (and thereâs a book to go with it) â and a columnist for Glamour magazine.
Weâre delighted to welcome Dawn to Banter for a conversation to be conducted by author and journalist Anna Carey.
Date, time and venue: it all takes place on Saturday April 5 at the Twisted Pepper (Middle Abbey St., Dublin 1). Doors open at 6.30pm and the interview kicks off at 7pm sharp. Admission is free and you can sign up to the limited invite list here.
The Back Page is a new festival of talking about sports. Brought to you by the people behind Banter and Bodytonic Music, it will feature all kinds of sports people talking about all kinds of sports. For our first outing, we have swimmers, athletes, football managers, snooker champs, rugby players and those who write about and talk about all of the above.
Full day by day programme below. Tickets for each session are now on sale here, including a special season ticket which will get you into every talk over the weekend.
THURSDAY MARCH 27
6.30pm Stage â Brian Kerr on the art of the gaffer
As well as being an astute and sharp pundit, Brian Kerr has been an international manager (Republic Of Ireland, Faroe Islands) and a club manager (St Patrickâs Athletic) so he knows all about controlling, directing and guiding the team from the sideline. The Back Page will quiz him about what it takes to be a manager, what makes a good â and bad â manager and who he rates in the game. Anyone who caught Brian in full flow at Banter a while ago will know to expect some witty, insightful and super-sharp thoughts.
8.00pm Stage â Go Deep with Steve Redmond
The endurance swimmer comes out of the water to talk (and talk). A former rugby player and triathlete, Steve is best known for successfully completing the Oceans Seven challenge, which entails swimming seven of the most difficult straits or channels across the globe, and was voted 2012 World Open Water Swimming Man of the Year. The Back Page will ask him about what he does and, more importantly, what drives him on to do more.
FRIDAY MARCH 28
6.30pm Stage â War Stories
Vincent Hogan (Irish Independent), Shane McGrath (Irish Daily Mail chief sportswriter) and Clare McNamara (RTE) compare scars and tall tales from life in the trenches writing and talking about sports. Chaired by Michael Moynihan (author of âGAAconomicsâ and sports writer with The Irish Examiner). Flak jackets and helmets available at the door.
6.30pm Basement â Online with Paddy Power
Michael Nagle from Paddy Power on how social media helped to turn a small Irish bookmaking set-up into a worldwide operation. Weâll hear about how the company has used social media to push their profile and build the brand, the ups and downs of this strategy, the way in which social media has changed the market, whatâs the future for sports â and sportspeople â online and if our favourite athletes will continue to use Twitter to act the eejit
8.00pm Stage â A conversation with Ken Doherty
The don of the green baize talks sport as we join him on the road from Jasonâs in Ranelagh to world snooker champion and well-regarded broadcaster with Sunshine FM
We all know â or think, anyway â that the GAA is loaded, but where exactly is the money and where does it come from? One of the best sports books of 2013 wasâGAAconomicsâ by Irish Examiner journalist Michael Moynihan who set out on the trail on the money in the our national games. He joins us at The Back Page to uncover the money trail from the training pitch of your local club to the plush surrounds of GAA HQ in Croke Park. In conversation with Mick OâKeeffe
6.30pm Basement â The Summit
Nick Ryan is the director of The Summit, the powerful, magnetic and riveting documentary about what happened on the K2 expedition in 2008 which led to the deaths of 11 climbers who had successfully made their way to the top. Itâs a compelling look at why people take this challenge on the peak which straddles the Himalayas between Pakistan and China â and the terrible, often fatal dangers even for the most experienced climbers
8.00pm Stage â The Anti Room on the gender politics of sport
Be it Premiership football, golf, rubgy or Formula 1, there is an on ongoing disparity between attitudes to, and coverage of, male and female sports. Sportswomen and commentators â Irish womenâs rugy team captain Fiona Coghlan and writer, broadcaster and sports fan Elaine Buckley â join Sinead Gleeson to discuss sports, gender and the issues which women athletes face.
8pm Basement â Just A Bit of Banter Banter
Eamon Zayed (Shamrock Rovers and Libya), Dermot Keely (former player and manager, current newspaper columnist with The Irish Sun) and Ed Randolph (US born former basketball pro and coach now living in Dublin) recall tales of racism and sectarianism, on and off the field of play, discuss what needs to be done to deal with them in sport and how sport can, in the wider world, help to tackle them. Presented in association with Show Racism the Red Card and chaired by Emmet Malone from The Irish Times
The question of Irish identity is one which seems particularly apt around about now, as the national holiday approaches and we prepare for a few years of centenary commemorations and celebrations. But what does it mean to be Irish in 2014? Does it even matter? Does our past identity inform our future one? Or should it? What about the new wave of Irish emigrants? This Banter event will delve into questions of Irishness and unearth where our collective identity is at â or at least start the conversation.
The panel: Sinead Gleeson (Irish Times/The Book Show), Denise Charlton (Immigrant Council of Ireland), Colm O’Gorman (author, activist, director of Amnesty International Ireland and founder of One in Four) and Paddy Cullivan (The Camembert Quartet,  Leviathan and Callan’s Kicks). This Banter will be chaired by Una Mullally.
Musician, singer, songwriter, author and DJ, Ben Watt is a man with a long and chequered musical history. One half of Everything But the Girl, the founder of the Buzzinâ Fly and Strange Feeling labels, the man behind the Lazy Dog, Neighbourhood and Cherry Jam club nights and venues and a regular DJ on BBC 6 Music, Ben recently returned to the solo career he parked back in 1983 when EBTG came along. His new album âHendraâ will be released on his new Unmade Road label next month.
He has also found the time to pen two fine books. Published in 1996, his autobiographical memoir âPatient â the True Story of a Rare Illnessâ told the story of his extraordinary life and death battle with a rare auto-immune disease Churg-Strauss Syndrome (aka Eosinophilic Polyangiitis) four years earlier, during which he was hospitalised for nine weeks, endured several life-saving operations, and lost 80 per cent of his small intestine.
His new book is called âRomany & Tomâ and itâs a portrait of his parents, a vivid story of the post-war years, ambition and stardom, and family roots and secrets.
Date, time and venue: it all takes place on Tuesday March 18 at the Twisted Pepper (Middle Abbey St., Dublin 1). Doors open at 6pm and the interview kicks off at 6.30pm sharp. Admission is free and you can sign up to the limited invite list here.
Jon will be joining us on Thursday March 20 to talk about âFrankâ, his forthcoming e-book on the extraordinary Frank Sidebottom and the true story which inspired the forthcoming movie of the same name by Lenny Abrahamson which stars Michael Fassbender, Domhnall Gleeson and Maggie Gyllenhaal.
For a taster of what to expect from the book, have a read of this beautiful piece by Jon about Frankâs creator Chris Sievey, which ran in The Guardian a few months ago.
The Banter conversation with Jon Ronson takes place at the Twisted Pepper (Middle Abbey St., Dublin 1) on Thursday March 20. Doors open at 6pm and the talking starts at 6.30pm-ish. Admission is free but limited and you need to sign up to the invite list here. [Please note that the invite list is now closed]
Weâd another full house at Banter last night as we welcomed Peter McVerry for a conversation about his life and work. It was an engrossing evening, helped hugely by the righteous conviction and fortrightness of the man answering the questions. Many thanks to Peter for his time â and to the audience for their attention and great questions.
That conversation was part of our ongoing Living for the City series which really seems to have struck a chord. To date, weâve also talked about bikes, gaffs and the new Dubliners.
Our fifth outing will be about alternative spaces around the city. In recent times, weâve seen a huge growth in new venues and creative spaces in and around the city which have provided audiences with something other than the norm when it came to entertainment.
Weâve gathered together a number of people who are involved in these new initiatives to talk about how these spaces have come about, what they offer to creative projects, whatâs the long-run prognosis for these venues, the role of NAMA and Dublin City Council and what advice theyâd offer to those seeking to do their own alternatives.
The details: Twisted Pepper, Middle Abbey St., Dublin 1; Wednesday February 26; doors open 6pm and the talking starts at 6.30pm; discussion followed by audience Q&A; admission is free but you need to sign up to the invite list here.
Bantercasts: weâre now in the podcasting business with new episodes from our previous adventures in talking every week. You can catch up on the broadcasts to datehere or subscribe via the iTunes store or, for Android users, this link. Big thanks to Bantercast producer Tanya White for Old Hat for all her work on this and to Garret Hynes, Kiwi Horgan and Ken McGuire for their recording aid and assistance.
We really should be playing âThe Town I Loved So Wellâ at this juncture. Banter travels the rocky road to Derry next weekend for our third outing in the city in the last 12 months and our second visit with Other Voices.
Itâs actually our fifth hook-up with the good folks at Other Voices in all â weâve already been with them in Dingle, Derry, London and Dingle again â and itâs mighty good to be able to bring the Banter show on the road like this every couple of months.
We have an action-packed line-up of guests for Derry and here we go with the day-by-day line-up and venue details. Admission to all Banter at Other Voices events is free, but capacity is limited so itâs first come, first served. Weâll also be raffling tickets for the main Other Voicesâ concert at our events Saturday and Sunday so if youâre after a ticket, we may be able to help.
Thursday â Nerve Centre, Magazine St. â 8pm
Annie Mac â the BBC Radio One queenpin joins us for a chat about life on the radio. Sheâll be playing a late-night gig at Sandinoâs but before she brings the rave, Annie will be talking about this, that and the other.
Saturday â The Cottage, Craft Village, Shipquay St. â 2-6pm)
Conor Masterson â the director of In the Deep Shade, the acclaimed documentary on Irish musicians The Frames, on his relationship with the band and catching the skin and bones of the bandâs 20 year-plus career on the big screen. Conorâs film will be screening at The Nerve Centre at 5.30pm as part of the OneTwoOneTwo music documentary festivalâs trip to Other Voices.
The Love/Hate Story â itâs been one of the biggest Irish TV hits of recent years and as we prepare for the fifth season, director David Caffrey joins us for the ballad of Nidge, John Boy, Fran, Tommy, Siobhan, Trish and Elmo
Michael Hann on the art of the interview â what does it take to get a great interview out of someone? Is there anything that can be done to save an interview when it goes off the tracks? Should some interviewees be told in advance that they can always say no? Is Noel Gallagher really the best value interviewee in rock? Michael Hann, The Guardianâs music editor and a man who knows his way around good and bad interviews, talks about what happens when you press record
Sunday â The Cottage, Craft Village, Shipquay St. â 2-4.30pm
Lloyd Bradley â a highly-regarded British writer on black music from funk to reggae, Lloyd is the author of the compelling history of reggae âBass Cultureâ and, more recently, the compelling âSounds Like Londonâ, a book at looks at how immigrants have shaped black music in the city over the last 100 years.
Lloyd Bradley
Paul Duane â the film-maker behind hit TV series Amber and such fantastic dodcumentaries as Barbaric Genius (on London-Irish writer John Healy), Natan (profiling revolutionary Franco-Romanian director Bernard Natan) and Very Extremely Dangerous (focusing on musician, robber, cancer patient and all-round badass Jerry McGill) talks about his work to date â and life after getting listed by Variety magazine as one of their 10 Directors to Watch in 2014
Sunday â Nerve Centre, Magazine St. â 5pm sharp
Martin Hayes â we bring our weekend of Banter to a close with a conversation with the master fiddler from Feakle, Co Clare and a founder member of The Gloaming, a group who are proving to be one of the greatest Irish acts of their generation. Banterâs conversation with Martin Hayes will precede of a screening of the Moment to Moment documentary on The Gloaming as part of OneTwoOneTwo at Other Voices.
Full information on all Other Voicesâ activities in Derry over the weekend, from the performances in the Glassworks and such new initiatives as Local Voices and Outer Voices to the music trail to OneTwoOneTwo, here.