Gabriel Byrne marries long time 12 year old girlfriend Hannah Beth King

Gabriel Byrne marries long time 12 year old girlfriend Hannah Beth King

Sorry, I can’t find her age anywhere online. If anyone cares to find it, we can change the headline. For now, I’m pissed it’s not me.

Gabriel Byrne weds girlfriend Hannah Beth King in Cork
خليجية

GABRIEL Byrne has married his long term girlfriend Hannah Beth King.
The 64-year-old Irish actor wed his film producer partner in a ceremony at Ballymaloe Country House Hotel in Co Cork on Monday evening.

The actor’s friend, politician Mannix Flynn, was first to publicly share the news and to congratulate the couple.

“I want to congratulate both of them and wish many years of great togetherness and happiness, that’s fantastic news,” Mr Flynn told Liveline on RTE Radio one.

“It gives you a confidence in the institution of marriage and the institution of commitment to each other. That’s a very strong statement to each other and they did it in a great place. It’s a fantastic ******** for any**** to tie the knot so to speak.”

Byrne, who recently starred in the series Quirke, was previously married to the actress Ellen Barkin, with whom he has two children.

خليجية

خليجية

Gabriel Byrne gets married to girlfriend Hannah Beth King in Ballymaloe Co Cork – Irish Mirror Online

I find him so attractive and have since the mid 80’s. Those sad pretty eyes, the soft brogue. I’ve never dated anyone his age. I look at him and Richard Gere (okay, Sput, yes, Jeff Goldblum too), aging well, seasoned looking, trim, masculine, well dressed, probably all fun to date.

So how old is this Hannah bitch? 30? 33? 35?

Do they know it’s time to stop band aid?

Do they know it’s time to stop band aid?

DO they know it’s time TO stop band AID?

The re-release of band Aid’s “Do they know it’s Christmas” (this time, to raise funds in the fight against Ebola) has been a huge commercial success – the single, which features everyone from Harry Styles to Bono singing lines, shot to the top of the national charts on its release on Monday and generated over $2m-worth of cash for the cause in the first five minutes of its release.

By the time Christmas actually comes, the fundraising single, a re-worked version of the original first released 30 years ago (sample lyric: "A kiss of love can kill you / And there’s death in every tear") will probably have raised in the region of $10m.

So, what’s not to like?

Plenty, to judge by the furious reaction the song has prompted in the UK national conversation, with a series of accusations that the song is patronizing, racist, counter-productive, reinforces stereotypes and even disrespectful to the predominantly Muslim population of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, who don’t celebrate Christmas.

The debate became particularly heated when a Liberian academic, Robtel Pailey, and the original Live Aid promoter Harvey Goldsmith went head to head on the BBC’s flagship current affairs radio program, Today.

Pailey said the song “reinforced stereotypes” and said it described the continent as “unchanging and frozen in time,” adding, “it ‘others’ Africa in many ways…it refers to ‘them versus us’ and that’s incredibly patronizing and problematic.”

(In fact, the original line, “Tonight thank God it’s them instead of you,” has been replaced with, ‘Well tonight we’re reaching out and touching you.’)

Goldsmith replied, “Does that mean we have to sit back and do nothing?”

Miss Pailey said band Aid should have supported African artists, such as Liberian musicians D12 and Kuzzy, who have released similar tracks to raise money for Ebola.

Goldsmith replied he had never heard of them.

The increasingly vicious debate has since migrated into newspaper columns and TV.

British-Ghanian rapper Fuse ODG wrote in The Guardian that he was "sick of the whole concept of Africa … always being seen as diseased, infested and poverty-stricken."

Janice Turner, in the Times, wrote, “How outdated the band Aid single feels. A bunch of old, white, rock titans come together with young, white, X Factor hotties to persuade Britain to heal Africa. Shuffle the lyrics of Do they know it’s Christmas to replace famine with ebola. Bish, bosh; that’ll do. … The record is raising money but it could have raised spirits too if Bob Geldof had reined in his ego. Why not have Harry Styles, Chris Martin, Bono et al play alongside musicians from Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia?”

Sir Bob, 63, responded with his usual colorful ******** to his critics. Appearing on Sky News he said (twice, much to the newscaster’s dismay) that critics who said band Aid should “stay silent” were “talking bollocks.”

Jack Lundie, Director of Communications for the British charity Oxfam, defended the single to the Daily Beast. “I think the debate is so heated because people really care passionately about changing the world,” he said. “And there is frustration, because it sometimes feels like stuff isn’t changing. And as a sector, we don’t tell the story of progress well enough.”

He said he supported the band Aid single as a “mainstream charitable initiative” that would “bring in people who wouldn’t normally engage”.

Of the song itself, and the criticism the Christmas-based lyrics have received, Mr Lundie said, “Band Aid is raising money to fight Ebola. The bottom line is that Ebola is terrible and the world is not doing enough. But if we define our approach by an over-literal analysis of pop lyrics, we will end up on a road to nowhere.

“Its cheesy pop. But if people really want to talk about the line, well, clearly, the song is not questioning whether people in the countries affected by Ebola know there is a holiday on the 25th of December.”

https://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/11/22/do-they-know-it-s-time-to-stop-band-aid

Why do people say this every time a celebrity dies?

Why do people say this every time a celebrity dies?

How come whenever a celebrity dies, people feel the need to go into a r.i.p. thread and go on and on about how they don’t care and people die every day. No shit people die every day. Just because people die everyday doesn’t mean you can’t feel sad about about someone you like/admire dying .
If they really din’t care then why post at all?

here are some examples:

Quote:
People crying and congregating across the world just to be together? seriously? Get a bit bloody grip on reality would you!

I feel sorry for his real friends, family and his kids (maybe they have a better chance at a ‘normal’ life now) but it irritates me that they are making this out to be such a tragedy? why? my next door neighbour died last year at 50 by a heart attack and left a wife and two sons, people die every day, life goes on. I bet you somewhere in the world at the same time a little boy or girl died who never got a chance to live 50 years and really experience life, what is more tragic?

Maybe I got out of bed on the wrong side, cant just be me that is not devastated at the news?

Quote:
i’m annoyed at how many people are updating their facebook status to "r.i.p. michael jackson", like they actually gave a shit. all the daily star readers i went to school with were probably amongst the first of those to lampoon him for kiddie fiddling. now its just turning into jade-goody-gate all over again. i’ve already been invited to join groups dedicated to him. what on earth do people think this will achieve? its ridiculous.

but when people are more concerned about this than whats happening in the middle east it reflects thee fact that we’ve become a little more than a heat magazine nation there’s far more important things happening in the world, so we can’t just suddenly divert all our attentions to a man who was really dead by 1995. today i’ll watch his music videos as i think he created some of the greatest videos i’ve ever seen, and i’ll listen to jackson 5 records, but i’m not going to mourn as i didn’t know the man. i’m just going to get on with my life and so should everyone else.