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Politics | Hog 100% |  9 Feb 2007
A giant leap for Northern Ireland The Whole Hog
The decision by Sinn Féin to endorse the PSNI as the legitimate police force for Northern Ireland heralds a new dawn in politics in Ireland.

Politics | Frontlines 98% |  9 Jan 2007
Northern Ireland in 2006  
A look at the developments in Northern Ireland in 2006.

Politics | Frontlines 97% | 20 Dec 2005
NORTHERN IRELAND: Of cowards and brutes... The Whole Hog
Annual article: A year in developments in Northern Ireland reviewed.

Politics | Frontlines 96% | 24 Nov 1999
The Northern Ireland Book Of the Dead Niall Stanage
LOST LIVES, the stories of the men, women and children who died as a result of The Troubles, is one of the most remarkable and essential books of our time. NIALL STANAGE interviews one of its authors, BRIAN FEENEY, and on the opposite page, recounts how his own life was touched by a violent chapter that many now hope is drawing to a close.

Music | Interview 95% | 20 Nov 2003
Phlegm Were The Days! Colin Carberry
Protex, Rudi, The Outcasts and Ruefrex reassembled last week to celebrte the arrival of a book about Northern Ireland punk. .

Politics | Frontlines 94% | 17 Feb 1999
Throwing Out A Lifeline Dundas Keating
DUNDAS KEATING reports on the increasing emphasis on harm reduction as a means of combatting drug abuse in Northern Ireland.

Politics | Frontlines 93% | 27 Oct 1999
The Writing On The Wall Dundas Keating
DUNDAS KEATING looks at the changing significance of murals in Northern Ireland

Politics | Frontlines 92% | 15 Sep 1999
Closing Down The Choices Niall Stanage
Pro-life campaigners have been celebrating the closure of one of the few organisations in Northern Ireland which provided information on abortion. NIALL STANAGE gets the other side of the story.

Hot Features | Commentary 91% | 30 Mar 2000
ON THE NORTHERN FRONT Jackie Hayden
From theatre to rock, Northern Ireland is enjoying a huge cultural renaissance. Jackie Hayden reports on the new breed of movers and shakers

Politics | Frontlines 90% | 14 Feb 2005
No Blacks Or Chinese Need Apply Colin Carberry
For the Chinese community in Northern Ireland, life can at times be difficult in the face of racism and violent attacks. But they can also spare a little time to party, as our very own Chinese checker Colin Carberry discovered on a visit to the hectic offices of the Chinese Welfare Association. Photos: Amberlea Trainor.

Politics | Frontlines 90% | 30 Jun 2006
How Peter Hain made a hames of the Parades Commission Eamonn McCann
When the Northern Ireland Secretary Peter Hain appointed two members of the Orange Order to the Parades Commission, he set himself up for a political bruising. But worse than that, he may have fatally undermined the ability of the organisation to function.

Politics | Frontlines 89% | 22 Jun 2000
BROTHER-IN-ARMS Niall Stanage
Former British soldier BERNARD O MAHONEY served in Northern Ireland during the H-Block Hunger Strike. Now, he has written a book about the reality of army life for a typical squaddie a reality where ideas of decency, fairness and the rule of law were often left behind. Words: NIALL STANAGE. Pictures: PETER MATTHEWS

Hot Features | Interview 88% | 14 Dec 2001
Mark Durkan – the Hot Press interview Joe Jackson
As the new leader of the SDLP and Deputy First Minister in Northern Ireland, MARK DURKAN will have plenty to occupy his mind in 2002. Here he talks about the early death of his father, politics and paramilitaries in the North, the Dublin/Monaghan bombings, his opposition to Sellafield and membership of Greenpeace – and what Mo Mowlam might have piped into the Good Friday talks! Words: JOE JACKSON

Politics | Frontlines 88% | 16 Oct 2002
David Ervine Olaf Tyaransen
A former member of the UVF, David Ervine was jailed in 1974 on explosives charges. His paramilitary past notwithstanding, he has emerged in recent years as one of the most impressive politicians in Northern Ireland. The subject of a new biography by Henry Sinnerton, here he talks about Johnny Adair, drink, drugs, his family and the crisis facing Unionism that threatens to derail the peace process

Politics | McCann 86% | 18 Aug 1999
Ask Not What Mo Mowlam has Done For Northern Ireland But What Northern Ireland has done For Her Eamonn McCann
One man went to Mo, and quoted Hot House Flowers. Don t go.

Politics | Message 82% | 13 Sep 2001
The evil of sectarianism Niall Stokes
There had been a working assumption that, in the thirty-plus years of the Troubles in Northern Ireland, we had just about seen it all. But last week proved otherwise

Politics | Message 82% | 10 May 2001
Give us some truth Niall Stokes
It’ll be some time before the real significance of what’s been happening in Northern Ireland over the past week becomes clear.

Music | Hit the North 82% | 12 May 1999
Seconds Out, Round Two Stuart Bailie
A recent discussion on the state of the music scene in Northern Ireland turned into an out-and-out shouting match.

Politics | Message 80% | 15 Sep 1999
Mo And The Moral Maze Niall Stokes
WHO would want the job? Mo Mowlam was riding high in the wake of the Good Friday agreement last year; at that stage, she was entitled to feel that she had actually contributed something substantial to bringing about a peaceful solution to the awful conflict that has disfigured life in Northern Ireland for so long.

Politics | Message 80% | 24 Nov 1999
Peace Comes Dropping Slow Niall Stokes
ANYTHING can happen. It's what you have to constantly bear in mind in relation to Northern Ireland:

Music | Hit the North 80% | 24 May 2001
Another homer run Colin Carberry
The Oh Yeah Northern Ireland dance awards gave a hat-trick of gongs to phil kieran. COLIN CARBERRY reports

Politics | Message 80% | 17 Feb 2000
IN THE SHADOW OF THE GUNMEN Niall Stokes
JUST when you thought it was safe to go back into the water, the jetty collapses. On Friday afternoon last, it was hard to escape an awful, mournful sense of dij` vu, as the word came in on the mojo wire that the new devolved institutions of governance in Northern Ireland had been suspended, and direct rule from Britain reimposed.

Politics | McCann 79% |  4 Dec 2003
The importance of being other Eamonn McCann
“There’s no sense running for election unless first you suspend all sense of shame.” From that starting point, Eamonn McCann went on to exceed all expectations in the Northern Ireland election. Here, he recalls the highs and lows of the campaign.

Politics | McCann 79% |  4 Dec 2003
The importance of being other Eamonn McCann
“There’s no sense running for election unless first you suspend all sense of shame.” From that starting point, Eamonn McCann went on to exceed all expectations in the Northern Ireland election. Here, he recalls the highs and lows of the campaign.

Politics | McCann 78% |  1 Mar 2001
Outing Maggie Eamonn McCann
The secret actions of the British military in Northern Ireland are about as funny as Carry On Sergeant

Politics | Frontlines 74% | 28 Jun 2007
Suicide - the silent epidemic sweeping Northern Ireland Colin Caughe
Three teenagers from Craigavon High School have committed suicide in the past month. So why are young men in the North taking their lives in record numbers? And what can be done to prevent further tragedy?

Politics | Hog 69% |  6 Apr 2007
Northern light The Whole Hog
With Paisley and Adams agreeing to play ball, Northern Ireland looks like becoming an unstoppable force over the coming years.

Music | Interview 68% | 10 Oct 2006
Archer on target again John Walshe
Iain Archer’s new album Magnetic North finds the singer recalling the good and bad of growing up in Northern Ireland.

Politics | Frontlines 68% | 27 May 1998
NORTHERN EXPOSURE Adrienne Murphy
Adrienne Murphy reports on the fascinating results of a survey of gay life in Northern Ireland.

Politics | Hog 68% | 28 Apr 1999
Remember To Forget The Whole Hog
In trying to explain the Irish to an Icelandic friend recently, I said that hope springs eternal from our well of despair.

Music | News 67% |  7 Oct 2005
BBC Northern Ireland to give away free tickets The Hot Press Newsdesk
Disproving the adage that nothing in life is for free,

Politics | Hog 67% | 17 Dec 2003
Northern uproar The Hog
The survival of the Good Friday Agreement hangs by a thread following last week’s assembly elections.

Hot Features | Commentary 67% | 16 Nov 1994
THERE probably isn’t any other play Joe Jackson
THERE probably isn’t any other play quite as relevant to the changing political landscape in Ireland right now as A Night In November by Marie Jones. It’s currently running in Eamon Doran’s, on the site of the former Rock Garden, and focuses on the experience of a young Northern Protestant, who finds he must completely re-evaluate his life and attitudes after attending a qualifying match between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland in Belfast’s Windsor Park and then following the Irish teak to New York.

Music | News 67% |  4 Jan 2008
Pay*ola to headline first Sounds of Northern Ireland night The Hot Press Newsdesk
Retro rockers Pay*ola are set to headline the first running of a new monthly gig night in Lisburn.

Politics | Frontlines 67% | 23 Sep 2005
Come on you other boys in green Stuart Clark
David Healy’s 25-yard screamer spelt victory not only for Northern Ireland, but the campaign to rid Windsor Park of sectarian abuse.

Politics | Hog 67% | 20 Jul 2000
Mistaken Identity Dermot Stokes
Unionist? Nationalist? British? Irish? It s time to question the old definitions

Politics | Hog 66% | 19 Jul 2001
High On The Hog The Hog
On the West Coast of the USA, people still hold Ireland in high esteem - why?

Politics | Hog 66% |  2 Mar 2000
Our Friends In The North Dermot Stokes
Progress doesn t always follow a straight line. Far from it. Sometimes you take two steps sideways for every one step forwards. There s another image that holds progress to be a kind of tumbleweed effect. We roll forward, but sometimes we re going backwards, and mostly we re just marking time. Frustrating? Yes, but it has the ring of truth. Nowhere is this more evident than in Northern Ireland.

Music | Interview 66% | 20 Jun 2005
Northern Uproar Colin Carberry
Enthusiastic, irreverent and proudly DIY, Across The Line TV is the best rock show to come out of Northern Ireland since...well, it's been a while.

Politics | Hog 66% |  5 Jul 2002
Half time core The Hog
The games are over but clashes, questions, tribunals and treaties remain with us

  66% | 25 Mar 2003
McCann: War and Peace In Northern Ireland hotpress.com member offer
 

Music | News 65% | 20 Jun 2002
Vote early, vote often The Hot Press Newsdesk
Not only can you vote your fave new band onto the Witnness bill via Today FM - you can do the very same via BBC Radio 1, whose Northern Ireland Sessions are also bringing the power to the people

Politics | Hog 65% |  8 Nov 2001
Don’t look back in anger The Whole Hog
Those who dwell in the past face an uncertain future

Hot Features | Interview 65% | 29 Nov 2001
A land of contradictions Philip Watt
Philip Watt, director of the National Consultative Committee On Racism and Interculturalism, outlines the urgent and necessary response to racism in ireland

Politics | Hog 65% | 21 Jun 2001
No more Mr Nice Guys Dermot Stokes
After the referendum, the abiding impression is of confusion, apathy and vague anti-government malaise

Politics | Frontlines 65% | 11 Oct 2001
The bitterest pill Helen Toland
Rising abuse of prescription drugs, often mixed with alcohol, has introduced a deadly new dimension to Northern Ireland's drug problem. Helen Toland reports

Politics | Frontlines 65% |  4 Apr 2002
Culture shock Colin Carberry
The biggest obstacle to Belfast becoming the European City Of Culture may be the reluctance of its own people to accept that it deserves the title. Colin Carberry reports

Politics | Hog 65% |  4 Aug 1999
Disgracing Ourselves Again The Whole Hog
The whole hog on the northern deadlock

Politics | Hog 65% |  6 Oct 1993
BACK TO THE FUTURE Dermot Stokes
Once again the Northern Ireland agenda shifts, and once again the unhappy region returns to the headlines.

Music | News 64% | 16 Feb 2006
Donna Legge quits The Session The Hot Press Newsdesk
Donna Legge is stepping down as the presenter of BBC Radio 1’s The Session In Northern Ireland after a seven-year tenure.

Politics | Hog 64% |  2 Aug 2002
Screwing the pooch The Hog
Is this the summer of our discontent? Well, it sure ain't no holiday

  64% | 13 Dec 2004
It Makes You Want To Spit: The Definitive Guide To Punk In Northern Ireland Member CD Offer
 

Politics | Hog 64% | 16 Jun 2004
Bringing it all back home The Whole Hog
we can’t change the world, just the bit we ourselves are responsible for

Politics | Frontlines 64% |  3 Mar 1999
Pat Finucane - The Campaign Continues Niall Stanage
The controversy surrounding the murder of Belfast human rights lawyer Pat Finucane [see Hot Press 22/7] is once again making the headlines.

Politics | Frontlines 64% |  3 Mar 1999
Hero, Villain Or Fool? Niall Stanage
A new book attempts to shed light on the life and violent death of ROBERT NAIRAC, one of the northern conflict s most mysterious victims. But, as NIALL STANAGE reports, it is unlikely that the whole story will ever emerge.

Politics | Hog 64% | 15 Dec 2000
The North Dermot Stokes
The north did not witness such seismic changes in Y2K as it had in preceding years. But there was still plenty going on, as a society in which war had become the norm stumbled towards peace.

Politics | Frontlines 64% |  7 Sep 1994
Let’s Talk About Peace Eamonn McCann
Over the past decade in ‘The Hot Press Political Interview’ the subject of Northern Ireland has, not surprisingly, surfaced time and time again. What follows is but a small selection of these quotes, specifically those that look to the future rather than to the past.

Politics | Frontlines 64% | 25 Oct 2001
The force was with him Stuart Clark
As the RUC continues to undergo serious changes, STUART CLARK meets RICHARD LATHAM, a former officer who has a story of danger, death, politics and sex to tell

Music | Interview 64% | 26 Jun 2002
Label queens Colin Carberry
Independent labels Bright Star and Slide are proving that Northern Ireland is breaking records in more ways than one

Music | Interview 64% |  7 May 2003
Over the moon Jackie Hayden
The Moondogs were one of the original wave of late ’70s Northern Ireland punk bands. Now reformed, they have no less than two albums slotted for imminent release. Bassist Jackie Hamilton tells all.

Politics | Frontlines 64% | 31 Aug 2005
What Mo Mowlam did for us Joe Jackson
The former Northern Ireland Secretary, who died recently, helped bring peace to the North

Politics | Frontlines 63% |  2 Mar 2000
The Armalite and the TV Screen Niall Stanage
PETER TAYLOR is one of the most experienced journalists to have covered the Troubles. Midway through the screening of his most recent TV documentary, Loyalists, he spoke to NIALL STANAGE about the North s pivotal personalities, his hopes for a peaceful future, and why Provos was keenly watched by Loyalist paramilitaries.

Politics | Hog 63% | 21 Jul 1999
The Song Remains The Same The Whole Hog
The Whole Hog looks, with foreboding, at developments in the North

Politics | Frontlines 63% |  3 May 2006
In the maw of the dragon Craig Fitzsimons
Ballymena is a sleepy Northern Ireland town in the heart of the Presbyterian ‘Bible belt’. How did it become the heroin capital of Europe?

Politics | Frontlines 63% | 16 Apr 2008
The sleuth will out Anne Sexton
In his latest novel, Derry crime-writer Brian McGilloway explores criminal activity in a post-Troubles Northern Ireland.

Politics | Frontlines 63% | 24 Aug 1994
“If you have a political question to ask, ask it. If you haven’t, then we’ll terminate the interview . . .R Joe Jackson
You could hardly describe it as just another day at the office when we sent Joe Jackson to talk to the Deputy Leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, peter robinson. In a rancorous interview, they still manage to cover the party’s attitude to Catholics, homosexuals, Albert Reynolds, The Pope, the IRA, loyalist paramilitaries – oh and the small matter of an impending civil war. Pix: Colm Henry.

Politics | Frontlines 63% |  4 Aug 1999
Lies, Guns And Dirty Tricks Niall Stanage
Belfast human rights lawyer PAT FINUCANE was shot dead in his home by the UFF ten years ago. There has long been a suspicion that the security forces colluded in his assassination. Recent developments do nothing to alter that belief. By NIALL STANAGE.

Politics | Frontlines 63% |  6 Aug 1997
northern EXPOSURE? Olaf Tyaransen
A top American psychologist claims she has unearthed disturbing evidence of CIA involvement with British Intelligence in Northern Ireland. Olaf Tyaransen reports.

Politics | Frontlines 63% | 11 Jun 2007
He’s the son of a preacher man Jason O'Toole
His father, the Rev. Ian Paisley, has been one of the dominant figures in Irish politics over the past 40 years. Now Ian Paisley Jnr is a Junior Minister in the new Northern Ireland administration. So how different is he from his father? And how does he feel about cross border co-operation, education, abortion and homosexuality?

Music | Interview 62% |  8 Jun 2000
There s No Business Like Snow Business Colin Carberry
SNOW PATROL are now, officially, the next big thing. Because when Northern Ireland says so, it must be true.

Hot Features | Interview 62% | 27 Jun 2002
Mo Mowlam Joe Jackson
As Secretary Of State in Northern Ireland, Mo Mowlam [pic left by Mick Quinn] played a crucial role in formulation and implementation of the Good Friday Agreement. It helped that she is no conventional politician but rather a warm, down-to-earth and decent individual with a genuine commitment to positive action. in both the UK and Ireland, she became by far the most popular British figure in the history of Northern politics - which may explain why, in the end, she was shafted.

Politics | Frontlines 62% | 15 Sep 1999
Death On The Doorstep Eamonn McCann
RAYTHEON, the armament-technology firm which manufactured Patriot and Sidewinder missiles, is establishing a plant in Derry and the local politicians couldn t be happier. EAMONN McCANN reports.

Politics | Frontlines 62% |  5 Aug 1998
The Billy Boy Niall Stanage
A defining personality of the seismic changes in Northern Ireland, Billy Hutchinson is a paramilitary turned politician, a convicted UVF murderer who spent 16 years in the Maze and who will now represent the PUP in the new Assembly. But if Hutchinson has abandoned violence, it hasn’t altogether abandoned him. As he reveals in this interview with niall stanage, there have been three attempts on his life by the INLA in the last 18 months. Pics: Michael Taylor.

Politics | Hog 62% | 19 Dec 2003
It's grim up north The Hog
There are those who argue that the best that Northern Ireland can hope for is dreariness. They’ll have been disappointed this year, so. It’s been grim instead, and right from the off.

Hot Features | Interview 62% | 16 Mar 2000
SUMMIT IN THE AIR Stuart Bailie
Music movers and shakers, old and new, gather 'round the table to review the state of play in Northern Ireland. Your host: Stuart Bailie.

Politics | Frontlines 62% | 15 Sep 1999
The Troubles Tour Niall Stanage
As Northern Ireland begins to cash in on its recent history, NIALL STANAGE takes a West Belfast taxi tour around the area s landmarks. Pics: PETER MATTHEWS

Politics | Frontlines 62% |  8 Jul 1998
TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE NORTH Niall Stanage
The winds of change have been blowing through Northern Ireland in 1998, with the endorsement of the Belfast Agreement and the establishment of the Assembly. But that only made it more likely that extreme loyalists would portray the march to Drumcree church near Portadown, and the July 12th parades, as an opportunity for Protestants and Orangemen to make a final stand. It was surely shaping up for a season of discontent – until the Quinn brothers were murdered in a loyalist sectarian petrol bomb attack on their home. By Niall Stanage. Photos: Peter Matthews.

Hot Features | Interview 62% | 29 Oct 1997
ULSTER SAYS MO! Joe Jackson
As Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, MO MOWLAM M.P. has one of the toughest, most thankless jobs in British and Irish politics. The task facing her is an unenviable one: to bring together the two extremes of both traditions, however briefly, for the purposes of all-party talks. In this exclusive interview, she talks about the difficult journey to date, and the immense challenges which lie ahead of her. Our man who went to Mo: JOE JACKSON. Pix: COLM HENRY.

Politics | Frontlines 62% |  6 Oct 1993
Northward Bound Emma Flynn
EVERY YEAR, AND FOR A VARIETY OF REASONS, HUNDREDS OF YOUNG PEOPLE FROM THE SOUTH DECIDE TO GO ON TO THIRD LEVEL EDUCATION IN NORTHERN IRELAND. EMMA FLYNN REPORTS ON THE REALITIES OF ACADEMIC LIFE OVER THE BORDER.

Music | Interview 62% |  5 Jul 2005
At Home With David O'Reilly Colm O Hare
Across The Line presenter David O’Reilly is a house-proud DIY enthusiast. And look what a lovely garden he’s got. Photography by Amberlea Trainor.

Music | News 62% | 19 Nov 2009
NIMIC closure leaves huge void The Hot Press Newsdesk
The Northern Ireland Music Industry Commission has been disbanded.

Politics | Frontlines 62% | 14 Apr 1999
Cut Down For Standing Up Niall Stanage
The murder of human rights lawyer Rosemary Nelson sent shockwaves throughout Ireland and beyond. As was the case with the murder of Pat Finucane almost exactly ten years before, there are suspicions of security force collusion, and a feeling that anyone who speaks out for the beleaguered nationalist community is putting their own life in Danger. Report: Niall Stanage.

Politics | Frontlines 62% |  5 Oct 1994
WAR IN AN IRISH TOWN Anne Connolly
When the IRA ceasefire began in the early minutes of September 1st last, nationalists in Belfast and Derry rejoiced in the streets. In the South Armagh village of Crossmaglen, however, there was barely a murmur. Over the past 25 years, the sniper’s bullet and the mortar bomb have claimed the lives of more soldiers and RUC personnel in this small area than anywhere else in Northern Ireland. Anne Connolly visits what has become the most militarised zone in western Europe and takes the post-ceasefire pulse of a stubbornly resilient little town. Pics: Jason Clarke.

Hot Features | Interview 62% |  8 Dec 2005
Trouble in paradise Olaf Tyaransen
Ethnic tensions threaten to destabilise Thailand's deep south. Could a Northern Ireland-type conflict be on the horizon?

Politics | Frontlines 62% |  2 Nov 1994
BY TRIAL AND TERROR Stuart Carolan
The procedures and policies of the judicial system in Northern Ireland has come, once again, under close scrutiny with the case of the Ballymurphy Seven. Stuart Carolan travels to Long Kesh to hear the stories of Hughie McLoughlin and Mickey Beck, who along with Tony Garland, are the longest-ever remand prisoners in the province.

Politics | Frontlines 61% | 24 Nov 1999
Twist Of Fate Niall Stanage
I WAS born in Belfast on 18th June 1974. A few hours before my birth a bomb exploded in Lurgan, Co. Armagh.

Politics | Frontlines 61% | 20 Feb 2003
Eve of destruction Michael D Higgins
Just returned from his latest visit to Baghdad, Labour TD Michael D. Higgins reports on an already embattled people braced for more suffering – and argues that there is a moral imperative to oppose the proposed war

Politics | Frontlines 61% | 18 Aug 1999
Triumph In Adversity Joe Jackson
At a time when public disillusionment with politicians is arguably at an all-time high, Cork Fianna Fail MEP BRIAN CROWLEY continues to buck the national trend by commanding a huge personal vote. But then, this is not a man who fits easily into any obvious political mould. A former rock singer and still a passionate music fan, he has survived a near-fatal car crash and learned to live with a permanent disability resulting from an earlier life-changing accident in his teens. Here, the man many tip to be a future President of Ireland, talks candidly to JOE JACKSON about matters personal and political. Pics: COLM HENRY.

Politics | Frontlines 61% | 23 Jul 2002
On a collusion course Eamonn McCann
Important questions of the Stevens inquiry team were left unasked by the recent Panorama investigation into collusion between loyalist paramilitaries and the security forces, and the murder of Pat Finucane

Politics | Frontlines 61% | 19 Jul 2001
Gerry Adams Joe Jackson
With the new publication in book form of a collection of his newspaper columns, the Sinn Féin president addresses matters both personal and political. Here he offers further thoughts on Omagh, death threats and the peace process as well as on music, his late mother, his own family and his vision of a private life beyond politics.

Politics | Frontlines 61% | 26 Apr 2001
The terror, the terror Joe Jackson
WITH ITS RESOUNDING ECHOES OF THE TROUBLES, THE WAR BETWEEN THE BASQUE SEPARATIST GROUP ETA AND THE SPANISH STATE REMAINS BLOODY AND SEEMINGLY INTRACTABLE. WITH HIS FIRST BOOK, DIRTY WAR, CLEAN HANDS, IRISH JOURNALIST PADDY WOODWORTH PRESENTS A COMPELLING BUT OFTEN HARROWING ACCOUNT OF HOW VIOLENCE DEFEATS POLITICS AND TERROR BEGETS TERROR. AND, REFLECTING ALSO ON HIS OWN PAST POLITICAL INVOLVEMENT WITH SINN FÉIN, HE TELLS JOE JACKSON HOW HE HAS COME AROUND TO THE VIEW THAT TALKING IS ALWAYS BETTER THAN WAR. AUTHOR PORTRAITS: CATHAL DAWSON.

Hot Features | Interview 61% | 21 Jun 2007
The IRA were not defeated Jason O'Toole
Martin McGuinness was one of the key figures in the troubles in Northern Ireland . Many unionists believe that the one-time IRA man was at the heart of much that was wrong and divisive in Irish life. But ultimately the quiet Derryman has taken on the role of peacemaker – and he is now the Deputy First Minister in the new power-sharing administration at Stormont.

Hot Features | Interview 61% | 18 Mar 2009
Return to Zion Jason O'Toole
The world was united in condemnation over the Israeli bombardment of Gaza. In a rare print interview Israel ambassador to Dublin Zion Evrony says the campaign was justified and that his country was motivated by the desire to bring peace to the Middle East. And he tells us why comparisons between Northern Ireland the Middle East are fatuous

Music | Interview 61% | 16 Aug 2001
Ace of bass Dermod Moore
Opening our U2 special, DERMOD MOORE catches up with ADAM CLAYTON during the UK leg of the Elevation tour, and delves deep into the physics of music celebrity, politics and, er, penises

Hot Features | Interview 61% |  1 Feb 2007
Inside the IRA Jason O'Toole
John Noonan, who played a pivotal role in the IRA’s military campaign against the British occupation of Northern Ireland, gives a revealing interview to Jason O'Toole.

Hot Features | Commentary 61% |  5 Oct 1994
Northern Exposure James Elliott
A special report on the arts in Northern Ireland which is alive and rocking with the whole gamut of cultural activity. Here James Elliott and Margaret F. Grundy give the lowdown on the province’s artistic and creative hub.

Hot Features | Interview 61% |  9 Nov 2000
Kevin Myers Joe Jackson
Best known for his Irish Times column An Irishman s Diary, KEVIN MYERS has been denounced as arrogant, bigoted, pompous and prejudiced. And those are just the people who like his witty writing! On the occasion of the publication of a collection of his writings, the journalist they either love or loathe talks to JOE JACKSON about class, prostitution, drugs, relationships, the North, Mary Ellen Synon and more. Photography: CATHAL DAWSON

Hot Features | Interview 60% | 27 Oct 1999
Have I Got Views For You Barry Glendenning
He s the editor of Private Eye, a regular on one of television s most populAr shows and he got his big career break from Peter Cook. Notwithstanding all those bruising court battles, IAN HISLOP has more reasons than most to be cheerful. Interview: BARRY GLENDENNING.

Music | News 59% | 23 Mar 2006
The Chalets extend tour to Northern Ireland The Hot Press Newsdesk
Fresh from announcing a full Irish tour, The Chalets have set a plan of attack for Northern Ireland.

Industry | Reports 59% | 25 Oct 2002
Gettng the best from the fest The Hot Press Newsdesk
Enterprise Ireland and Invest Northern Ireland join forces for an Irish stand at MIDEM, the planet's most important music industry convention

Politics | McCann 59% | 17 Mar 1999
Abortion And The North Eamonn McCann
It s easy to assume that attitudes in the North never change, but the pro-lifers don t think so, and they re right.

Politics | Message 58% | 12 Jan 1994
The Joint Declaration by the Irish Niall Stokes
The Joint Declaration by the Irish and British governments on the future of Northern Ireland may or may not be a thing of substance.

Music Review | Album 58% | 18 Aug 1999
Covers And Others Adrienne Murphy
Covers and Others showcases the work of eight up-and-coming Northern Ireland bands. The general genre is straight-up rock, with many of the featured bands comprising guitar, vocals, bass and drums.

Politics | Message 57% | 11 Jan 1995
IT would be churlish not to begin Niall Stokes
IT would be churlish not to begin the new year in a spirit of hope. 1994 saw the most remarkable changes take place in Northern Ireland and after 25 years of war, bloodshed and strife, the paramilitary guns were silenced on both sides of the sectarian divide.

Music | News 57% | 22 Mar 2007
Irish acts head to America's capital The Hot Press Newsdesk
You’ll be hard-pressed to find a musician in Norn Iron next week as anyone who can bang, blow or strum an instrument clears off to Washington DC for the Rediscover Northern Ireland Arts & Culture Program.

Politics | Message 56% | 18 Jun 2004
Remembering Mary Holland Niall Stokes
Even though the citizenship referendum produced a worrying result, the fight for justice and equality goes on – a fitting tribute to the memory of a great journalist.

Music | News 56% |  6 Aug 2003
Leya sign two management deals The Hot Press Newsdesk
The Northern Ireland band take things up a notch with two management deals

Music Review | Album 56% | 11 Dec 2003
The Note that Lingers On Oliver Sweeney
For more than 30 years now, Colum Sands and his siblings have observed the fabric of Northern Ireland as its society struggles with the notion of political change, and the methods employed to achieve it. Not for them the high moral tone of the artist as commentator; their preferred conduit is humour and gentle persusion, the pointing up of folly through the well chosen word.

Music | News 56% | 18 Apr 2008
Brian Kennedy joins call for music royalty rights The Hot Press Newsdesk
Belfast man Brian Kennedy has given his support to the campaign to set up a Music Royalty Rights Society in Northern Ireland.

Politics | McCann 55% | 29 May 2008
Hypocritic oafs Eamonn McCann
Women in Northern Ireland are three more likely to have a late abortion than British women. But that doesn't matter to the tribal elders...

Music | Homefront 55% |  9 Mar 1994
NORTHERN BORES Nell McCafferty
REGINALD MAUDLING, during his stint as colonial overseer of Northern Ireland, had a particularly trying couple of days there once and on his way home on the British government plane he ordered a large Scotch, pronto.

Politics | Message 55% | 23 Oct 2002
Checkmate, it seems Niall Stokes
Has a series of raids by the PSNI on Sinn Fein offices allowed David Trimble to pass the buck?

Music Review | Album 55% | 26 Oct 2000
Hudson Street Stephen Robinson
Northern Ireland’s biggest dance outfit have enjoyed considerable success since the crossover hit ‘El Nino’ in 1998, and currently feature on several Ibiza compilations.

Music Review | Album 55% | 14 Apr 1999
The Faltering Flame: Poems And Songs For Peace Patrick Brennan
The Faltering Flame is a collection of poems and songs united behind the common theme of striving for peace in Northern Ireland. All the profits from the sale of this CD go to the Cornerstone and Currach projects, two bodies working with mixed community groups on the peace line in Belfast. Needless to say, it's a very worthy cause and deserves your support.

Music | Hit the North 55% |  7 Jul 1999
Bathroom Blues Stuart Bailie
It is early in 1999 and Hillary Clinton is making one of her occasional visits to Belfast.

Music | Hit the North 54% |  9 Sep 2002
Fude for thought Colin Carberry
When art student Roger Herbert set up fastfude.com as part of a term project, little did he know that five years later it would be one of Northern Ireland’s most popular and controversial music sites

Music | Hit the North 54% | 10 Nov 1999
Simply The Fest Stuart Bailie
The logistics of putting together this year s main belFEST activities were pretty daunting

Politics | Message 54% | 29 Sep 1999
Inching Forward Niall Stokes
IT was in many ways a good week in Irish political life. Within two days, two major reports were published and in both cases you d have to say that their authors did well.

Politics | Message 54% | 31 Aug 2000
War And Peace Niall Stokes
Every day another outrage. Every day another act of vengefulness and malice. Intimidation. Violence. Shootings. Then murder. The North has seen some desperate times lots of them even more full of doom than this, for sure. But seldom has there been a week of more intense clandestine viciousness than the one we have just been through.

Politics | Message 54% |  2 Aug 2001
Keeping their eyes on the prize Niall Stokes
At the time of writing, we are in a state of suspended animation. The new, so-called Blueprint for the North which has been hammered together over the past fortnight by the Irish and British governments is finished.

Politics | McCann 53% | 24 Jun 2004
The party of the red sea Eamonn McCann
with the north’s rock elite behind him, our columnist goes in search of the euro vote (but not before dissing mel gibson and gm crops).

Music | Hit the North 53% | 13 Jan 2004
Government in action Colin Carberry
Colin Carberry reflects on a year in which northern rock got a long-overdue injection of punk attitude.

Hot Features | Reports 53% |  9 Apr 2008
Hooley, madly, deeply Colin Carberry
The man who nurtured the Northern Ireland punk scene is about to get a long overdue birthday party.

Politics | McCann 53% |  1 Aug 2003
No accounting for it Eamonn McCann
Too many gardai with guns; the international role of the soldiers of bigotry; and a potentially significant advance in abortion law in Northern Ireland.

Politics | McCann 53% | 29 Nov 2001
All round the houses Eamonn McCann
The Belfast Agreement appears to offer stability at the price of sectarian stalemate

Music | Hit the North 53% |  4 Aug 1999
SWEET BEAT MANIFESTO Stuart Bailie
The DIFFERENT DRUMS OF IRELAND are helping the lambeg and the bodhran to beat as one.

Music Review | Live 52% | 16 Jun 2005
Live At The King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels Brian Beary
There could be no better illustration of how U2 have become global icons. Kick-starting the European leg of their Vertigo tour in Brussels’ King Baudouin Stadium on June 10, the old anti-sectarian favourite ‘Sunday Bloody Sunday’ electrified the crowd like no other. Here, however, it had been transformed from its original intent as a plea to end bloodshed in Northern Ireland into a hymn for religious harmony among the ‘sons of Abraham’ – Christians, Jews and Muslims.

Politics | Message 52% | 20 Nov 2002
Collateral damage Niall Stokes
Parallels between military action against civilians on Bloody Sunday and President George Bush’s actions, and inaction on September 11 suggest that we’re still getting nothing but the same old story – so far

Politics | McCann 52% | 14 Apr 1999
The Backlash Eamonn McCann
Eamonn McCann on ladism , post-feminism and violence against women

Hot Features | Comedy 52% | 14 Jul 1993
ONE OF OUR 'EOIN! Lorraine Freeney
JIMEOIN, ONE OF THE MOST SUCCESSFUL COMEDIANS WORKING IN AUSTRALIA, WAS BORN AND BRED IN NORTHERN IRELAND AND EMIGRATED SEVERAL YEARS AGO IN SEARCH OF SUNSHINE AND A FAIRER WAY OF LIFE. BACK HOME FOR HIS FIRST EXTENSIVE IRISH TOUR, HE TELLS LORRAINE FREENEY WHY AUSSIES RULE...

Hot Features | Foulplay 52% |  4 Aug 1999
Transferring The Blame Jonathan O Brien
IN TERMS of farcicality, time-consumption and sheer bloody-mindedness, the Northern Ireland peace process is in danger of being usurped as the stupidest show in town by the Nicolas Anelka transfer saga. I exaggerate, naturally, but only slightly.

Music | Hit the North 52% | 18 Aug 1999
Spray To Go Stuart Bailie
STUART BAILIE reports on the innovative and vital work of graffitti artist MODE 2, currently working in Belfast. PICS: RICKY ADAM.

Music | Hit the North 52% | 17 Feb 1999
Productive Barry Stuart Bailie
These days, Barry McIlheney is a major player in the world of London-based consumer magazines. He s been a guiding hand behind FHM, Q and Mojo, and has just launched a weekly entertainment magazine, Heat.

Music | Hit the North 52% | 29 Sep 1999
Lords Of the Trance Stuart Bailie
Chris Agnew took a call from a mate at his home in Larne, last year. Whatever you do, said the friend, make sure you watch Miss World tonight.

Music | Hit the North 52% |  3 Mar 1999
From Therapy? To Tractors Stuart Bailie
When it s time to write the big story of Ulster rock and roll, Therapy? will be a crucial act to deal with.

Politics | McCann 51% | 23 Jul 2002
Security alert Eamonn McCann
The link between sacked airport workers in Belfast and Israeli intelligence; and the controversy surrounding Alex Maskey's wreath-laying at the war memorial

Politics | McCann 51% | 18 Feb 2003
The name calling game Eamonn McCann
why unionists and nationalists helplessly wring their hands at job losses but go on the offensive over a city's name; the origin of the "axis of evil"; and a hail of abuse to the chief

Politics | McCann 51% | 30 Nov 1994
LEGAL WEAPONS Eamonn McCann
Should the illegal arms be handed over? The Northern Ireland Secretary, Sir Patrick Mayhew, was, understandably, very anxious about the answer to that question. And he’s probably even more anxious now as he awaits publication of the report of the Scott Inquiry into arms-related sales to Iraq.

Politics | Hog 47% | 14 Dec 2001
Breaking the mould in Northern Ireland The Whole Hog
The IRA made a start on decommissioning and it broke the mould

Politics | Hog 42% | 14 Dec 2001
The year of the plague – remember? The Whole Hog
The impact of September 11th was so corrosive that we have now almost forgotten the year’s other bookend, Foot and Mouth disease

Politics | Hog 41% | 17 Feb 2000
North & South Of The River Dermot Stokes
Consistency and continuity. Hmmm. These are things we value. Like when Ireland used to be hard to beat at football. That was good, wasn t it? You ll never beat the Irish. Not at football. Not then, anyway. It would be different if we were talking about rugby. But that, sadly and predictably, is another story. A very other story. About which nobody can do nothing. As it were.

Politics | Hog 41% | 30 Dec 2004
There are More Guns Than Ever on The Streets: The Whole Hog's 2004- Crime in Ireland (part 1) The Whole Hog
One campaigner in the local elections was told by a succession of potential voters that the trouble with this country was ‘too much law and not enough order’. Certainly a lot of people exercised themselves on the subject.

Politics | Hog 41% |  2 Nov 1994
SETTLING OLD SORES Dermot Stokes
I’ve been driving in the west. Out there beyond the water margins of Yang Shang-Po, aka Oughterard, after which the landscape shifts into something quite different from that which has gone before.

Politics | Hog 40% |  7 Sep 1994
THE CHOICE FOR A NEW GENERATION Dermod Moore
And suddenly with one bound they were free. The guns have fallen silent as I speak. Ceasefire. Not peace exactly, but close.

Politics | Hog 40% | 22 May 2003
Time to dream it all up again The Hog
The great and the good have imagined a new Ireland. Now it’s our turn

Politics | Hog 40% | 15 Aug 2008
Georgia Conflagration Brings Us Back To the Bad Old Days The Whole Hog
A glorious Olympic opening ceremony suggests a world at peace. But burning villages in Georgia and South Ossetia reminds us that human conflict is never far away.

Politics | Hog 40% | 21 Sep 1994
ANSWERING THE NORTHERN QUESTION The Hog
The opportunities to move forward are presenting themselves to all sides in the North. Now all we need is for everyone to do what the Irish do best - Talk!

Politics | Hog 40% | 26 Apr 2001
The saint comes marching in The Hog
Is it a bird? is it a plane? No, it’s supernun

Politics | Hog 40% |  8 Mar 1995
A Peace of the Cake The Hog
The Framework Document is there to give everyone, Unionist and Nationalist, a chance.

Politics | Frontlines 40% | 29 Mar 2001
The revolution will be televised Niall Stanage
TV coverage of Ireland's ethnic minorities has, until now, been restricted to news stories about immigration and racism. MONO, a new ten-part series from RTE, aims to change all that. NIALL STANAGE met the show's presenters, BISI ADIGUN and SHALINI SINHA. Photo: CATHAL DAWSON

Politics | Frontlines 40% | 19 Mar 2008
The SDLP and the future of Northern nationalism Jason O'Toole
They've been steadily losing ground to a resurgent Sinn Féin - and now there are rumours of a merger with Fianna Fáil. So does the SDLP really have a future? Mark Durkan clears the air.

Politics | Hog 40% | 14 Apr 1999
Hate Is all Around The Whole Hog
In the past I have expressed the angst of a columnist.

Politics | Hog 40% | 13 Sep 2001
Middle East or Eden? The Hog
'Sectarian conflict, bigotry and racism, coming soon to a city near you' In a column published two days before the unspeakable massacres at New York and Washington, THE HOG mourns the dawning of the most 'violent and polarised' era for the Middle East since WWII, and suggests, with tragic prescience, that the greater world would soon feel the reverberations

Music | Interview 40% | 11 Jun 2004
Days like these Colin Carberry
With her sparkling debut collection, 29-year-old Northern Ireland poet Leontia Flynn is making waves

Politics | Hog 40% |  1 Feb 2002
It was 30 years ago today The Hog
Whether in Ireland or in Israel, people are still worryingly slow to learn the lessons of history

Hot Features | Commentary 39% | 11 May 2000
Birth Of A Drug Problem Stuart Clark
Ballymena, for so long a byword for politics, Paisley and prosperity, is having to come to terms with heroin. Report: STUART CLARK.

Politics | Hog 39% |  8 Feb 2005
The Challenge To Sinn Féin The Hog
After the Northern Bank Heist, the climate has changed and other parties are now putting it up to the Shinners.

Music | Interview 39% | 14 Dec 2001
Juliet Turner's 2001 Staff Writer
Juliet Turner's 2001

Music | Interview 39% | 18 Jun 2007
Dates & info  
The full list of dates and booking information.

Hot Features | Interview 39% |  9 Mar 2004
Twin Peaks Colm O Hare
The irish language is thriving like never before, in Derry and Belfast.

Hot Features | Commentary 39% | 29 Apr 1998
THE REVENGE OF THE BANSHEES Stuart Bailie
It's been 33 years since Belfast girl Ruby Murray topped the UK charts with 'Softly Softly'. Since then, the female singers from the North have rarely scored internationally. Dana last hit the top 50 in '79. Newry stomper Clodagh Rodgers wowed Eurovision in '71 with her hot pants and a rendition of the oompah crowd-pleaser 'Jack In The Box'. And, er, that's about

Politics | Hog 39% | 15 Jan 2003
Our friends in the North The Hog
 

Music | Interview 39% |  8 Nov 2001
White here, right now Colm O Hare
ANDY WHITE is back in Ireland with a new optimism and a new album. COLM O'HARE reports

Hot Features | Commentary 39% | 15 Sep 1999
Nothing But The Same Old Story Barbara Flood
BARBARA FLOOD is unimpressed by RTE s forthcoming series on the 80s, Reeling In The Years

Politics | Hog 39% |  6 Nov 2003
Building On Unreality The Whole Hog
With our forty shades of illegal activity in all sorts of recreational activity, isn’t it time we woke up and smelt the coffee? or even the cocaine?

Politics | Frontlines 39% | 26 Jan 1994
THEMSELVES ALONE Bill Graham
There are those who believe that the Downing St. Declaration offers the best hope of peace in Northern Ireland for twenty-five years. But as Sinn Féin’s consideration of the fine print drags on, Bill Graham accuses them of theological nitpicking and argues that their negotiating position makes impossible demands on reality.

Music | Interview 39% |  6 Mar 2002
Things get worse before they get better Colin Carberry
The success of Desert Hearts should give Northern rock a timely shot in the arm

Politics | Hog 39% | 13 Jul 2006
Enough of the marching, let's parade! The Whole Hog
Would a surge in immigration diffuse sectarian antagonisms or inflame race-hate?

Politics | Hog 39% | 13 Oct 2005
Blowin' in the wind The Whole Hog
The IRA’s decommissioning marks a genuinely immense watershed in Irish politics.

Hot Features | Interview 39% |  7 Feb 2003
Featured writer of the month: Niall Stanage The Hot Press Newsdesk
Here are some of our - and Niall's own - favourite pieces of his, for varying reasons...

Politics | Frontlines 39% |  2 Apr 1997
EXPORTINGthemisery Stuart Bailie
Over 2,000 Northern Irish women leave the province every year to have abortions elsewhere usually in England. STUART BAILIE examines the many anomalies in the law on this subject, and talks to some of the people fighting to change it.

Politics | Frontlines 39% |  7 Dec 2000
The Time For Truth Niall Stanage
The Ministry of Defence will have to come out of its hiding place declared Eilis MacDermott QC for the family of Bloody Sunday victim Patrick Doherty, at the Saville Inquiry. Here we reproduce the bulk of her powerful and hard-hitting opening address

Hot Features | Interview 39% | 17 Jan 2002
Old Hayden's Almanac: December Jackie Hayden
 

Music | Interview 39% | 12 May 2003
Alternative Ulster Colin Carberry
With Colin Carberry’s Hit The North celebrating its third birthday, he takes a timely look at the burgeoning Belfast indie scene.

Hot Features | Interview 39% |  1 May 2008
More Bangor For Your Book Peter Murphy
Best-selling author Colin Bateman has just published his 21st book, which is being hailed by critics as a cracker. He talks to Hot Press about cutting his teeth as a writer in Northern Ireland

Music | Interview 38% | 14 Mar 2007
Snap happy Shilpa Ganatra
They got their first break when their single featured on an ad for digital cameras. Now South Africa’s The Parlotones are setting out to conquer the world.

Politics | Hog 38% | 24 Jun 2003
Rip it up and start again The Hog
The Irish health system and our attitude to the disabled desperately needs a rethink

Politics | Hog 38% | 20 Oct 1993
EMIGRATION IS GOOD FOR YA Dermot Stokes
And a nation weeps! The three Spanish goals that went in one after the other drooped the heart and mind. The ISEQ Index probably lowered by five points. Travel agents have ulcers where they once had digestive tracts!

Politics | Hog 38% | 15 Mar 2002
Chaz 'n' Dev The Hog
Who'd have thought a prince would offer us a useful history lesson

Music | Interview 38% |  4 Nov 2009
Could It Be Magick Now? Celina Murphy
This year over 15,000 young people took part in the Irish Youth Music Awards competition. We catch up with winners Magick Guvnors Radio Bottle to talk nerves, victory and their unusual name.

Politics | Hog 38% | 11 Nov 2009
The Truth About The Drink Driving Laws  
The drink driving debate is more nuanced than it may at first seem.

Music | News 38% | 12 Jul 2007
Ash announce autumn tour The Hot Press Newsdesk
Ash take to the road this October to promote their new album Twilight of the Innocents.

Hot Features | Interview 38% | 28 Aug 2008
Gone But Never Forgotten Jason O'Toole
Journalist Susan McKay's new book, Bear In Mind These Dead, revisits the families of victims, for many of whom the emotional scars have been slow to heal.

Politics | Hog 38% | 20 Apr 2006
Should we fear to speak of 1916? The Whole Hog
The recent Easter Rising commemration must encourage us to re-examine the events that lead to the foundation of state.

Music | Interview 38% | 19 Jan 2007
Question time Colin Carberry
Kicking off our 2007 coverage of the northern music scene, Hit the North answers all of those questions that have been keeping you awake at night. And a few that haven’t.

Politics | Frontlines 38% |  4 Mar 1998
It s My Party (And I ll Vote If I Want To) Liam Fay
LIAM FAY investigates the strange phenomenon of the RAINBOW PARTY, a pseudo-democratic movement dedicated to the abolition of politics and politicians , and meets its leader, the enigmatic RAINBOW GEORGE.

Music | Interview 38% | 15 Apr 1998
ON THE CRESS OF A WAVE Jackie Hayden
Even without a record deal, industrious Northern Irish reprobates watercress have a back catalogue to be proud of. jackie hayden meets band linchpin dan donnelly.

Music | Interview 38% | 15 Apr 1998
ON THE CRESS OF A WAVE Jackie Hayden
Even without a record deal, industrious Northern Irish reprobates watercress have a back catalogue to be proud of. jackie hayden meets band linchpin dan donnelly.

Hot Features | Interview 38% | 10 Nov 2004
Hit The North: Faux News Is Good News Colin Carberry
Newton Emerson’s barbed satirical website The Portadown News is immortalised in print this month.

Music | Interview 38% | 28 Feb 2007
Fingers on the pulse Craig Fitzsimons
Thirty years not out, Belfast punks Stiff Little Fingers are still railing against the establishment.

Politics | Hog 38% | 29 Mar 2002
Of saints and celebrities The Hog
Big brother is watching us, and we're watching big brother

Hot Features | Interview 38% | 28 Sep 2005
Bring back Connolly Tony Cascarino
More firepower is required if Ireland are to qualify for the World Cup, and Tony Cascarino knows who can provide it.

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 20 Dec 2005
RELIGION: Suffer little children The Whole Hog
Annual article: A year in the world of religion reviewed.

Music | Interview 38% | 19 Jul 2005
The Blunt Truth Steve Cummins
Piano-man James Blunt is a crooner with a difference. A former soldier, he’s witnessed real horrors first hand.

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 17 Jan 2002
Bloody reality Eamonn McCann
While they may disagree about context and certain details, the two new television documentaries about Bloody Sunday, far from being the "bloody fantasy" alleged by critics, offer accurate and powerful recreations of the events of that tragic and pivotal day. EAMONN McCANN, an eye-witness on Bloody Sunday, reports

Hot Features | Interview 38% |  5 Oct 1994
JIMMY, JIMMY, JIMMY, A MAN AFTER MIDNIGHT Tony Clayton-Lea
On the eve of his appearance in the Dublin Theatre Festival and with a nationwide Irish tour pending, Jimeoin, the award-winning Irish comedian, talks to Tony Clayton-Lea about his journey to fame, from his early jobs as a builder in London and a carpenter in Sydney to his current status as the funniest man in Australia. He may own ten Van Morrison albums but he's still the best man around to liven up a night on the town.

Hot Features | Interview 38% |  5 Oct 1994
JIMMY, JIMMY, JIMMY, A MAN AFTER MIDNIGHT Tony Clayton-Lea
On the eve of his appearance in the Dublin Theatre Festival and with a nationwide Irish tour pending, Jimeoin, the award-winning Irish comedian, talks to Tony Clayton-Lea about his journey to fame, from his early jobs as a builder in London and a carpenter in Sydney to his current status as the funniest man in Australia. He may own ten Van Morrison albums but he's still the best man around to liven up a night on the town.

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 20 Dec 2005
JUSTICE: Who will guard the guards? Eamonn McCann
Annual article: A year in the world of justice reviewed.

Music | Interview 38% | 29 Jun 2007
Snow in the summertime Stuart Clark
Snow Patrol‘s Gary Lightbody waxes eloquent about burnout, creativity, exotic fowl, and why David Healy should be made First Citizen Of The Republic And Overlord Of The Universe.

Music | Interview 38% | 11 Nov 2003
Dishing The Dirty Colin Carberry
If you’re looking for modesty, you’ve come to the wrong place. Colin Carberry meets Dirty Stevie, the balls to the wall rockers who are determined to become Belfast’s biggest band ever!

Politics | Hog 38% | 10 May 2001
Beating the brand Dermot Stokes
The growth of the no logo movement may be the only growth we really need

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 11 Dec 2008
Heads, you win Jason O'Toole
He's familiar to Northern listeners as a super-smooth middle of the road DJ. But in his misspent youth as a guitarist, Gerry Anderson lived a life of rock and roll abandon.

Music | Interview 38% | 10 May 2001
SOULMAN Barry O Donoghue
Richard Brophy meets Firstborn mainman and feel no pain DJ Oisin Lunny. Portraits: Myles Claffey

Hot Features | Interview 38% | 15 Sep 2005
Gangster's paradise? Colin Carberry
Nailed is a heist movie with a difference. It’s been written, produced and shot in Belfast. Director Adrian O’Connell believes it could revitalise the north’s film industry.

Politics | Hog 38% |  7 May 2004
Cassandra'a Day The Whole Hog
With every passing day, the wrong-headedness of the US war in Iraq and of their Middle-East policies in general, is getting clearer for all to see.

Politics | Hog 38% | 10 Feb 2005
Sinn Féin’s Selective Approach To The Truth The Hog
Peace in the North will remain impossible until Gerry Adams and co. cease their continual distortion of the facts.

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 23 Oct 2007
Million Dollar Bash Jason O'Toole
Eddie Jordan is among the people behind the initiative that brings the money-spinning World Rally Championship to Ireland for the first time ever this year.

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 20 Dec 2005
The Whole Hog's 2005 The Whole Hog
Annual article: The Whole Hog looks back on a year of strife and upheaval.

Music | Interview 38% |  9 Jan 2006
'Twas grim oop north Colin Carberry
Annual article: The NI music scene in 2005 provided as much excitement and fun as your average Irish League season.

Politics | Hog 38% |  9 Jan 2007
Dancing on the lip of a volcano The Hog
Bird ‘flu, bogmen and Armageddon. Business as usual on Planet Earth AD '06. Only more so.

Hot Features | Interview 38% | 20 May 2004
Cannes- do attitude Tara Brady
This year’s Cannes Film Festival is set to be the most successful yet for the Irish film-making community, according to film board chief executive Mark Woods.

Politics | Frontlines 38% | 30 Nov 1994
Cois Céim Guaranteed Irish Colm O Hare
COLM O’HARE reports on independent Irish language publishers COIS CéIM

Music | News 38% | 17 Jul 2008
Japanese Popstars Release Debut Album 28 July, 2008 The Hot Press Newsdesk
Derry-born Japanese Popstars give their dedicated following the perfect mid-summer offering- a full-length studio recording.

Music | Interview 38% | 18 Mar 1998
TOP CALIBRE Richard Brophy
Northern Irish duo CALIBRE are the latest addition to the Quadraphonic Records stable. RICHARD BROPHY catches up with them.

Music | Interview 38% | 31 Aug 2004
The men don’t give a suck Colin Carberry
Controversial underground magazine The Vacuum has been drawing severe criticism from the more conservative elements of Belfast City Council, including threats of an outright ban. words Colin Carberry

Music | Interview 38% |  9 Jul 1997
NOTHING COMPARES TO ROO Stuart Bailie
Roo are confident, savvy and unflinching in their aim to make remarkable music. There s something about their looks and attitude that remind you of George Best in 68: blessed with handy skills and unfazed by older, less talented rivals. Roo are the best new prospect from these parts. They can be funny, too.

Politics | Frontlines 38% |  5 Oct 1994
Rough Justice Liam Fay
Despite the IRA’s declaration of a ceasefire, there is considerable evidence to suggest that the Provos, like their Loyalist counterparts, are still engaging in “punishment attacks” and in the issuing of expulsion orders. Report: Liam Fay. Pics: Alan O’Connor

Hot Features | Commentary 38% | 27 May 1998
RUM, SODOMY ... THE SASH Stuart Bailie
It's Friday, May 22. The votes haven't even been counted yet, but already a succession of post-ballot parties are taking place. Your prime location is the Mandela Hall at Queens University Belfast, where a few hundred groovers will congregate around an event organised by those feverish tykes from the local music magazine, Blank. The name of the game is 'Keep Ulster Brattish' and admission is a mere quid.

Hot Features | Commentary 38% | 27 May 1998
RUM, SODOMY ... THE SASH Stuart Bailie
It's Friday, May 22. The votes haven't even been counted yet, but already a succession of post-ballot parties are taking place. Your prime location is the Mandela Hall at Queens University Belfast, where a few hundred groovers will congregate around an event organised by those feverish tykes from the local music magazine, Blank. The name of the game is 'Keep Ulster Brattish' and admission is a mere quid.

Politics | Hog 38% | 29 Nov 2001
Dancing in the streets The Hog
Any regime or philosophy that bans music is not only dehumanised but undivine

Music | Interview 37% | 11 May 2000
DEEP THROAT Eamon Sweeney
EAMON SWEENEY talks to rising noisy northerners THROAT

Politics | Hog 37% | 16 Mar 2005
The New Irish Identity The Hog
The continuing influx of immigrants into Ireland means that our old ideas of national identity are becoming increasingly redundant.

Politics | Hog 37% | 10 Mar 2005
The New Irish Identity The Hog
The continuing influx of immigrants into Ireland means that our old ideas of national identity are becoming increasingly redundant.

Politics | Hog 37% | 22 Feb 1995
PROPHETS AND LOSSES Dermot Stokes
The year is barely up and running and it seems just like the old one. Murder and mayhem, wind and water/water everywhere. Bastards bashing the knees off victims in Northern suburbs. And a Budget that neither pleased nor offended anybody too much. So what’s new?

Music | Interview 37% | 10 Jul 2003
2 live crew Stuart Clark
Those who can’t make it to Punchestown can still sample the musical highs, courtesy of 2fm. Stuart Clark reports

Music | Interview 37% |  7 May 2003
The Irish independents Jackie Hayden
The challenge of keeping Northern bands at home. Plus, news of education, services and airplay in the republic.

Hot Features | Commentary 37% | 10 Jun 1998
Dealers And Stealers Stuart Bailie
Hey pal - fancy a record deal? We like your style, we luuuurve the music and we're practically guaranteed to make you a star. So what's the hitch? Absolutely nish, my friend. Just sign the necessaries, and we'll proceed. Just think of that lovely £500 advance. Sure, you're signing up for a six album deal, but what the hell? Maybe you fancy a management settlement for, say, 12 years? What is there to lose, little guy? In fact we're such an awesome organisation that you should maybe go for a record deal and a management contract, all in the same tidy package. Tell you what, my man, if you really want, we can throw in the publishing rights, also. Wouldn't that take care of all your problems at a stroke?

Hot Features | Commentary 37% | 29 Apr 1998
HOW is it FOR YOU? The Hot Press Newsdesk
In June 1993, the legislation decriminalising sex between men was passed in Dáil Eireann and the Seanad, and was later signed into law by President Robinson. Five years on, how has life changed for Irish lesbians and gay men? By DEBORAH BALLARD.

Politics | Hog 37% |  8 Jan 2003
An unfair cop The Hog
 

Music | Interview 37% | 18 Jan 2006
Irish bands to watch for in 2006 John Walshe
John Walshe highlights some Irish artists set to cause a stir in 2006.

Hot Features | Commentary 37% | 11 Aug 1993
Stage Joe Jackson
IN HIS interview elsewhere in this issue Michael D. Higgins points out that there is little to be gained from indulging in discussions about a Dublin/the rest of Ireland divide. However it would be fatuous to deny that while Dublin slept coiled inside smug self assurance in terms of its pivotal role in relation to the arts, regional areas such as Galway gradually became more vibrant centres of cultural life, in many ways.

Music | Interview 37% | 27 Oct 1978
The Undertones - The Next Big Thing? Bill Graham
Teenage Kicks' is the word and the sound, an anthem from the most unlikely of sources - Derry. Come in Phil Coulter, your time is up.

Politics | Frontlines 37% | 21 Jun 2005
Go, Move, Shift Eamonn McCann
Travellers have been barred from the town of Larne in Northern Ireland, in what amounts to one of the most extreme uses of an ASBO yet under UK law. Report by Eamonn McCann.

Politics | Frontlines 37% | 23 Sep 2005
Fighting the occupation of Iraq Rory Hearne
Western spin depicts it as a blow for democracy, but for Raied Al-Wazzan, an Iraqi doctor based here for 15 years, the occupation of his country is illegal and must be resisted.

Politics | Hog 37% |  7 Jun 2001
Ask the audience The Whole Hog
Enlarge the bosom of the European family? It’s up to you

Politics | Hog 37% |  3 May 2005
Holy Shit, Here Comes ASBO! The Hog
The chattering classes express revulsion at Young Ireland's spitting, shouting and shagging, but their piety masks a disgust at anything youthful and working class.

Hot Features | Commentary 37% | 16 Mar 2000
The Law And The Letter Stuart Clark
Could the legal status of E soon change? In the third part of Hot Press continuing investigation into drugs, STUART CLARK reports on the clubbers pill of choice.

Politics | Hog 37% | 12 Apr 2006
Spring fever The Whole Hog
Or how the Easter Rising still frightens the horses.

Music | Interview 37% |  6 Dec 2001
Terry's all gold Richard Brophy
Richard Brophy meets the man who's taking techno into the mainstream, Terry Francis

Politics | Hog 37% | 19 Dec 2005
Apocalypse Now The Whole Hog
Annual article: War, famine, pestilence, plague and death...it’s been a cheerful 2005. Here is the Hot Press summary of the events that shook the world.

Politics | Hog 37% | 10 Jun 2002
Heroes and villains The Hog
The world cup saga as celtic myth? Could be

Music | Interview 37% | 12 Oct 2000
Woolsey s Worth Colin Carberry
He s the man behind Reservoir Prods , a load of Premiership goals and a woozy Robbie Williams. But most he s behind pop songs with big fuck-off choruses , a passion PHIL WOOLSEY extends with his new band NINEBAR

Music | Interview 37% | 15 Jul 2002
A howling success Colin Carberry
Checking out the Belfast club that's "queer as in gay, but also queer as in putting a twist on the culture"

Music | Interview 37% | 11 Sep 2008
Sino the times Paul Nolan
This year's Olympics were one of the most fascinating ever. We sought the opinions of leading musicians and sports commentators on a memorable two weeks' action.

Music | Interview 37% |  8 Dec 1999
Whats Neil Hannon On This Christmas Stuart Clark
Outstanding In a Field - The Divine Comedy mainman casts a steely eye over the millennium's last hurrah. INTERVIEW: STUART CLARKE

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 25 Apr 2007
The beautiful people Tara Brady
Young, hungry, professional film crews and equally young, beautiful and professional actors. What’s the Irish film industry come to? Just ask Speed Dating stars Nora Jane Noone and Hugh O’Conor.

Politics | Frontlines 37% |  6 May 2005
On-The-Spot Fines Raise Questions About Irish Human Rights Karla Healion
Those opposed say it’s an acute infringement on civil liberties. Supporters say it’s an essential step. Anti-social behaviour (ASB) may be a serious issue – but there is an increasing belief that the on-the-spot fines and Anti-Social Behaviour Orders (ASBOS) proposed by Minister for Justice Michael McDowell are not the answer. Karla Healion reports.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 24 Jun 1998
Life After Death Barry Glendenning
colin murphy is living proof that there is such a thing as a comedic afterlife. The Downpatrick funny man, who once "died every week for six months", tells barry glendenning all about heaven down here.

Music | Interview 37% | 29 Mar 2001
Dum Dums With(out) A Bullet Stephen Robinson
Josh Doyle of power pop outfit the Dum Dums gives Stephen Robinson his best shot

Hot Features | Commentary 37% | 10 Nov 1999
Oh, Danny Boy Nell McCafferty
NELL McCAFFERTY reads DANNY MORRISON S account of his years in Long Kesh, and falls in love with the man of the armalite and the ballot-box .

Music | Interview 37% |  7 Jan 1998
Hey, Hey, We re The BABOONS Stuart Bailie
Back at the turn of the decade there were three mad bands from Downpatrick Vietnam, Lazer Gun Nun and Confusion. The first of these dropped the dodgy heavy metal element and became Ash. The second toned down the Stooges sound to give room for the Backwater experience. Two-thirds of the last act have come back to haunt us in the form of Griswold.

Politics | Hog 37% | 24 Feb 2005
Where To Now For Sinn Féin? The Hog
The recent arrest of eight republican activists marks a hugely significant watershed in recent Irish history.

Hot Features | Commentary 37% |  8 Mar 1995
RED ALERT! Paul O'Mahony
PAUL O’MAHONY PREVIEWS A CHANNEL 4 SEASON OF SEX.

Music | Interview 37% |  6 Jan 2005
Across the Line Colin Carberry
Colin Carberry looks back at twelve months in which Bill Drummond’s Soup Line tour of Ulster was one of the Northern arts scene’s undoubted highlights.

Hot Features | Commentary 37% | 15 Apr 1998
HERE COMES THE KNIGHT Stuart Bailie
Elton John is on his way to Stormont to play a free gig - and it's causing consternation among some of the local bigwigs.

Politics | Frontlines 37% | 30 Nov 1994
BLACK AND WHITE AND READ ALL OVER Gerry McGovern
GERRY McGOVERN meets FERGAL KEANE, author of a new book on the new South Africa.

Music | Interview 37% | 15 Sep 1999
Not The Same Old Story Joe Jackson
PAUL BRADY has had an embattled career. In the course of it, he has made great music, won new fans and lost old friends. He has written powerful songs, locked horns with his record company, even contemplated quitting the business entirely. Now finally, he has come to new realisations about himself and about the enduring power of love. Interview: JOE JACKSON.

Politics | Frontlines 37% | 20 Feb 2008
Drive to oblivion Jason O'Toole
In an exclusive interview, DeLorean executive Brian Beharrell talks about the $24 million cocaine bust that hastened the demise of the sports car manufacturer's Belfast base.

Hot Features | Commentary 37% | 22 Sep 1993
Stage Joe Jackson
WEEK AFTER week I try to remain the right side of well-mannered when some myopic PR person or director phones and says "There's a play coming up in the blah-blah-blah theatre and it's got great music that'll really appeal to your readers."

Music | Interview 37% | 28 Sep 2000
The Transformer Peter Murphy
The first rule of interviewing LOU REED is that you don t: he interviews you. Peter Murphy survives the turning of the tables and is rewarded with thoughts on Joyce, Wilde, Dylan, Ginsberg and on becoming an elder stateman for the alternative thing .

Hot Features | Commentary 37% | 25 Jan 1995
Stage - THEY SHOOT PUNDITS, Don't They? Joe Jackson
“The world’s in a state of chassis,” to paraphrase that great, unforgettable actor whose name I can’t quite remember right now. At least, that’s the thought that struck me while entering Eamonn Doran’s Theatre in Dublin’s Crown alley (ex-Rock Garden) to see Shoot, If You Must.

Hot Features | Interview 37% |  1 Apr 1998
MURDER MOST FOUL Niall Stanage
From Belfast, NIALL STANAGE reports on the still-growing controversy surrounding Brian Nelson, British Intelligence and the murder of solicitor Pat Finucane.

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 22 Jun 2000
Criminal Records Stephen Robinson
PAUL CHARLES combines music and crime. STEPHEN ROBINSON investigates

Hot Features | Commentary 37% | 14 Apr 1999
Northern Exposure Chris Donovan
No-one knows a city like a local and so we asked Mike Edgar to be our guide to Belfast. Here he chooses ten things for visitors to do in the North s leading city. Only one problem: he forgot to tell us where to get an after-hours drink!

Politics | Hog 37% | 29 Apr 2003
The long war begins The Hog
After Saddam, are Syria and Iran next?

Hot Features | Interview 37% | 23 Apr 2003
The invaders will win the battle Niall Stokes
but who knows how long the struggle in Iraq will go on?

Hot Features | Interview 37% |  6 Sep 2002
No more Mr Nasty Guy Paul McGrath
The image of Roy Keane as a 'bastard' is not the man I know. But he might have been better advised in relation to that book…

Hot Features | Commentary 37% | 14 Jul 1993
THE RUC shot a runaway cow in the streets of Ballymena recently. Nell McCafferty
THE RUC shot a runaway cow in the streets of Ballymena recently. They didn't feel they had a choice, having received no training whatsoever in the control of country animals which get lost in a town.

Politics | Hog 37% | 19 Dec 2003
The selective 'war on terror' The Hog
The Coalition blitzkrieg on Iraq is part of a wider “war on terror.” says George Bush. To justify this claim, he and Tony Blair made one feeble attempt at being as hard on the causes of terror as on terror itself, when they collaborated with the UN, the EU and Russia to publish what they called the Middle East ‘road map’.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 18 Feb 2002
The puck of the Irish Colin Carberry
Having been dogged for years by sectarianism, Northern Irish sport has finally found a team that everyone can support. Colin Carberry reports on the phenomenal rise of the ice hockeying Belfast Giants

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 19 Mar 1997
street life Cathal Dawson
On Dublin s Grafton Street, it s all change. PAUL O MAHONY talks to long-time street-trader BRENDAN DOWLING about the old Dandelion Market and the evolution of a thoroughfare and also discovers another surprising side to the genial leather-belt man. Pic: CATHAL DAWSON.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 22 Dec 1999
Curbing the Herb Siobhan Long
SIOBHÁN LONG reports on the Department of Health's recent decision to restrict the sale of popular herbal remedy ST. JOHN'S WORT.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 27 May 1998
BLOOD ON THE STREETS Niall Stanage
NIALL STANAGE reports on the savage killing of ROBERT HAMILL in Portadown on a night when, his family are assured, the RUC stood idly by.

Music | Interview 36% | 28 Nov 2002
Holmer’s odyssey The Mixed Grill
“I hate these questions,” cries David Holmes, DJ, re-mixer, producer, free associate, film-scorer and friend to the stars. Yet he gamely faces the pan-ish inquisition that is the hotpress mixed grill

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 13 Apr 2000
Today s Tripper Stuart Clark
After half a century as the adventurous tripper s drug of choice, LSD is being given a designer makeover. In our continuing series on drugs, STUART CLARK checks out the hallucinogens.

Music | Interview 36% | 20 Aug 1997
U2 in Belfast! Mike Edgar
Mike Edgar talks to U2 about their long awaited return to Belfast

Music | Interview 36% |  1 Apr 1998
Knocked Out, Loaded Stuart Bailie
The Editor s office at Loaded is exactly how you imagined it would be. Heinous stains on the carpet. Tatty posters and ranting, scrawled messages on the walls. Buckshee liquor piling up on the table and numerous publishing awards plonked in the spare corners.

Politics | Hog 36% | 24 Oct 2005
It's only a game The Whole Hog
The Irish football defeat may have been a loss but there's more going on in the world than the cup.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 25 May 2000
READ EM AND WEEP Stuart Clark
FORGET THE FLOOD Tribunal. The biggest scandal in Y2K Ireland is the censor s continuing refusal to let The Daily Sport into the country.

Music | Interview 36% |  8 Sep 2008
Jazz Devil Colin Carberry
“I’m from the country,” David Lyttle informs us. “Jazz is an urban music. I probably shouldn’t have anything to do with it.”

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 29 Nov 2004
How Much Do The British Government Know About The Murder Of Pat Finucane? Tara Brady
There is inescapable evidence that British security forces colluded in the murder of defence lawyer, Pat Finucane. But now Michael Finucane wants to know just how high the responsibilty for the crime really goes.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% |  2 Mar 2000
The Great Reefer Barrier Stuart Clark
More people than ever may be smoking it but Ireland s marijuana laws remain among the most draconian in Europe. In the second part of our series on drugs in Ireland, STUART CLARK presents the dope on dope.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 13 Nov 2002
Edwina Currie Stuart Clark
The author and former Conservative MP on clashing with Ian Paisley, shaking hands with Gerry Adams, sex and drugs in the house of commons, what Margaret Thatcher did and didn’t know about her closest aides and why kissing and telling on John Major is justified

Music | Interview 36% |  5 Feb 2007
Hearts and minds Jackie Hayden
In the run-up to the long-awaited reunion gigs by the legendary eighties folk-rock-jazz band Moving Hearts, Jackie Hayden talks to saxophonist Keith Donald and percussionist Noel Eccles.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 10 Nov 1999
Still Crashing The same Car aka BootBoy
A new report on male depression and suicide rates gives Bootboy food for thought on men s inability to admit vulnerability.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 28 Jul 1993
Stage Joe Jackson
BEING OUT of the country on holidays means I have yet to see the latest interpretation of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream (Gate Theatre) but one fellow journalist did describe it as "a menopausal sex fantasy".

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 23 Nov 2000
Daughter On The Stage Joe Jackson
FIONA McGEOWN tells Joe Jackson about appearing at the Abbey Theatre and her reaction to the critics

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 25 Aug 1993
THE FIGHTING IRISH Colm O Hare
RTE Television's Editor of Irish Programming Cathal Goan discusses recent initiatives aimed at keeping the Irish language alive on the tube

Music | Interview 36% | 12 Nov 2003
Get into gear Colm O Hare
The guitar is back – and how! Instrument sales are healthier than they’ve been in years. but that’s not the only good news from Ireland’s music equipment shops.

Music | Interview 36% | 11 Feb 2008
Hit The North: Have you no Holmes to go to? Colin Carberry
Well, you do now. Robert Holmes‘ dark tales of working class Belfast mark him out as a songwriter to watch.

Music | Interview 36% | 23 Feb 1994
Fingers Doing The Talking Stuart Clark
NO LONGER ANGRY YOUNG MEN, BUT STILL PRETTY PISSED OFF THIRTY SOMETHINGS, JAKE BURNS AND BRUCE FOXTON TELL STUART CLARK WHY STIFF LITTLE FINGERS REFUSE TO LAY DOWN AND DIE. PIX.: CATHAL DAWSON.

Music | Interview 36% | 25 Jul 2007
Best doze of their lives Shilpa Ganatra
Having previously traded as shoe-gaze darlings The Catchers, Northern indie-poppers The Sleeping Years are back with a new record – and a rather handsome sleeve

Music | Interview 36% | 23 Feb 1994
Young gums go for it! Gerry McGovern
Few Irish albums have been as eagerly awaited as THERAPY?’s Troublegum and while the jury has yet to deliver its final verdict, early indications suggest that the band from Larne may be about to fulfil their own prophecy and become multifuckingnationally huge. But does taking on the world mean having to compromise the hardcore principles they’ve fought so hard to protect? ANDY CAIRNS and MICHAEL McKEEGAN tell Hot Press trouble-shooter GERRY McGOVERN that displaying your gums doesn’t mean having to sacrifice your teeth. Pix.: MICHAEL QUINN.

Politics | Hog 36% | 17 Sep 2008
Brit Happens The Hog
Having spent decades trying to cast off the legacy of colonialism are we now in danger of being sucked into the anglosphere at the cost of our European identity?

Music | Interview 36% | 20 Jan 2006
Deadly rivals Colin Carberry
Hailing from the distinctly un-rock ‘n roll vistas of suburban Belfast, Rivals could be the first great Northern rock band of 2006.

Music | News 36% |  8 Aug 2002
Hits: the North The Hot Press Newsdesk
New magazine NIMusic promises to illuminate various industry issues, as well as covering any and all Northern songs

Politics | Hog 36% | 16 Aug 2002
The harder they come... The Hog
... the harder they fall. First it was the church now it's the police. And what more dark secrets still remain to be revealed?

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 22 Sep 2009
The Bland Leading The Bland? Craig Fitzsimons
Ireland may still be in with a shout for World Cup qualification. But the turgid standard of recent performances leaves a great deal to be desired

Music | Interview 36% | 16 Dec 1996
I was so much older then, i m younger than that now Siobhan Long
Six albums to the good and only now has andy white discovered his teenage years. siobhan long catches up with a man catching up with his own adolescence.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 30 Jan 2006
Gone without a trace Steve Cummins
Lisa Dorrian was popular and fun loving. Then she fell foul of the North’s paramilitary underworld. A year since she vanished, her family is still trying to uncover the truth about her disappearance.

Politics | Hog 36% | 22 Sep 1993
The Walls Come Tumbling Down Dermot Stokes
And suddenly yet newer horizons opened up. The Arab and the Israeli shook hands. The walls came tumbling down. The lion and the lamb lay down together. The strangest things have come to pass.

Music | Interview 36% | 10 Oct 2007
Six On The Brain Colin Carberry
Transplanted Scots Six Star Hotel aren’t the sort to cause a song and dance, but that’s not to say they aren’t capable of creating a splash.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 14 Jul 1993
CHECK POINT CHARLIES Fay Wolftree
WELL, IT'S obvious, isn't it? The authorities helping the IRA out with their target practice, that is. Doubtless part funded by bodies with a vested interest in at least partially recreating an olde worlde war-time atmosphere. If the message to the IRA is Coo-ee! Over here!, what, then, I wonder is the message to the British public?

Music | Interview 36% | 22 Jun 2000
Bragg, Mama, Bragg Siobhan Long
Back with another volume of Woody Guthrie songs, BILLY BRAGG talks to Siobhan Long about supersonic boogie, the act of collaboration and why Tony Blair s Labour Party still has his respect.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 13 May 1998
REBEL WITHIN THE CAUSE Niall Stanage
BERNADETTE SANDS-McKEVITT, sister of Bobby Sands, is vice chairperson of the 32-County Sovereignty Committee, a body which has taken the lead in offering public opposition to Sinn Féin's peace strategy. Over the course of an historic weekend in Ireland north and south, NIALL STANAGE spoke to her about life as a Republican dissident.

Music | Interview 36% | 11 Mar 2002
Some neck John Walshe
Upon the release of their debut album Knievel Is Evil, John Walshe talks to Northern noisemongers Throat about their modus operandi

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 21 Sep 1994
The New Man In The Paisley Shirt Joe Jackson
With the focus of world attention increasingly on Unionism and its capacity to respond positively to the IRA ceasefire, IAN PAISLEY JNR. – the son of Dr Ian Paisley – talks about culture and the Protestant identity, about his father’s emotive brand of politics, about secret deals and about ‘that petty little Fuehrer’ Albert Reynolds. Interview: Joe Jackson. Pix: COLM HENRY

Music | Interview 36% | 10 Jul 2003
The not so bare necessities The Hot Press Newsdesk
From enjoying yourself to relieving yourself – here is your essential festival checklist

Music | Interview 36% |  9 Jun 2009
Hit the North: An Innocent Man Colin Carberry
He’s one of the most modest figures on the Northern Ireland music scene. But with David Holmes and Duke Special among his cheerleaders, it’s clear that Robyn G. Shiels is a special talent indeed.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 17 Apr 2007
Police state Eamonn McCann
Bomb materials made in Northern Ireland are killing people in the Middle East while the PSNI arrest protesters against the manufacturers, including this HotPress columnist.

Music | Interview 36% | 27 Jan 2003
The year of living outrageously Colin Carberry
Colin Carberry reckons that the next 12 months in Northern Ireland are going to rock. And then some.

Music | Interview 36% | 26 Aug 2002
Garden's party Colin Carberry
Fatboy Slim and Primal Scream are set to spearhead a welcome return of live music to Belfast's Botanic Gardens

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 17 Jan 2002
In the line of fire Brenda O'Donoghue
We see the reports on television and hear the voices on the radio but the brutal adrenaline-charged reality of the rioting in North Belfast can only be fully understood if you're in the thick of it. Gerry Ryan Show reporter Brenda O' Donoghue briefly was.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 24 Nov 1999
Book Of Remembrance Nell McCafferty
NELL McCAFFERTY finds consolation and healing in a new book detailing every life lost in the Northern conflict.

Music | Interview 36% | 27 Oct 1999
The Angry Brigade Peter Murphy
THERAPY? are back. ANDY CAIRNS talks to Peter Murphy about losing (and re-finding) the plot, hardcore, and the new album s resonances with the Northern peace process.

Politics | Frontlines 36% |  7 Jul 1999
Siniad Announces Withdrawal From West Belfast Festival Niall Stanage
SINIAD O CONNOR has withdrawn from Fiile An Phobail.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 26 May 1999
time Is Running Out For Republicanism Eamonn McCann
Between the unattractive alternatives of the Belfast Agreement and a return to war, there has to be a new way forward for the Republican movement. So says former IRA man and respected Republican TOMMY McKEARNEY. Interview: EAMONN McCANN PICS: CATHAL DAWSON

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 18 Nov 2008
It Could Happen to a Bishop Anne Sexton
Ever feel like chucking your job and doing something completely different? John Bishop did. The result is Stick Your Job Up Your Arse, the comic's journey from the corporate to the comedic world.

Politics | Frontlines 36% |  8 Sep 1993
SAMMY WILSON SAID Joe Jackson
. . . she was reet petite! That's not true, actually. Instead, the maverick motorbike-riding DUP councillor and former Lord Mayor of Belfast talks about loyalist paramilitary violence, the assassination of prison officers, the indifference of London, his hostility to Mary Robinson, his scorn for the Official Unionist Party - and his own willingness to take up arms in the cause of keeping the six counties out of a united Ireland. Interview: JOE JACKSON. Pix: CATHAL DAWSON

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 21 Mar 2007
Affirmative action Colin Carberry
Snow Patrol and Ash are just some of the North’s rock ambassadors who have given their backing to the Oh Yeah Music Centre, a state-of-the-art multi-media development which will put Belfast on the international musical map.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 15 Jul 2002
A revolution in the senate Adrienne Murphy
The Irish Senate Elections take place on July 17. Should we care?

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 25 Jan 1995
GET AWAY WITH YOURSELF! ?? ??
We’re all going on a summer holiday . . . but where! And when? And, most importantly, how? Hot Press can help.

Politics | Frontlines 36% |  2 Nov 1994
Cruising for a Living Joe Jackson
Arguably, the most contentious and controversial Irish political commentator of the last 25 years, Conor Cruise O’Brien’s analysis of Anglo-Irish affairs has always followed its own unique path. However, the scepticism with which he greeted the paramilitary ceasefires as well as his hardline stand on censorship, have led some to question the relevance of this most conservative of political observers. Interview: JOE JACKSON. Pix: COLM HENRY.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% |  7 Dec 2000
Uaneen Fitzsimons 1971-2000 Niall Stanage
Niall Stanage pays tribute to a remarkable young woman whose passion for music made her one of the most widely respected and genuinely loved people in the history of Irish music

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  6 Dec 2002
Jason, Mary and Holy Saint Joseph Stephen Robinson
His RTE series may not have impressed the critics, but the irrepressible Jason Byrne will shortly be back in the box and on a stage near you

Music | Interview 36% |  9 May 2006
Broom at the top Colin Carberry
Joe Brush has what it takes to make it all the way.

Politics | Hog 36% | 15 Aug 2005
A New Dawn? The Whole Hog
Will the IRA's promise to end violence be matched in deed?

Music | Interview 36% | 18 Aug 1999
Northern Uproar Stuart Clark
co.uk, with their spiky sound and their hearts set on superstardom, are the new great white hopes of the northern rock scene. STUART CLARK met them. PiX: MICHAEL TAYLOR

Music | Interview 36% | 14 Jul 2004
Sunny Intervals Colin Carberry
From the Vichy Goverment to the White Stripes – selected musical highlights to brighten up the north’s traditionally dull summer.

Politics | Frontlines 36% |  6 Oct 1993
COMING TO TERMS Niall Crumlish
IT'S THAT TIME OF YEAR AGAIN WHEN THOUSANDS OF YOUNG PEOPLE TAKE THAT OFTEN DAUNTING LEAP FROM SCHOOL TO COLLEGE. HERE, THE HOT PRESS STUDENT SPECIAL OFFERS ITS OWN INIMITABLE SAFETY NET.

Music | Interview 36% | 23 Sep 2003
Something Vichy going on. Colin Carberry
The nights may be drawing in, but there's no shortage of corking Northern Irish records to look forward to.

Music | Interview 36% | 11 May 2004
Crossing the line Phil Udell
One of Ireland's best music shows on radio is transferring to the small screen. Phil Udell meets the faces and voices behind Across The Line:TV

Music | Main Event 36% | 29 Sep 1999
Dance Is Coming Home Mark Kavanagh
HOMELANDS IRELAND, which takes place at Mosney on 25th September, will be Ireland s biggest and best dance event . . . ever! Preview: Mark Kavanagh.

Music | Main Event 36% | 29 Sep 1999
Dance Is Coming Home Mark Kavanagh
HOMELANDS IRELAND, which takes place at Mosney on 25th September, will be Ireland s biggest and best dance event . . . ever! Preview: Mark Kavanagh.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 24 Aug 2005
Lovable rogue Tara Brady
He's famous for playing nutters and outcasts, but in person Robert Carlyle is charm personified

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 21 Jan 1998
Pride Or Profit? Stuart Clark
Initially billed as a celebration of gay culture by its organisers, the forthcoming DUBLIN MARDI GRAS seems to be splitting its supposed target community right down the middle. Although its supporters see it as a laudable complement to the long-established Gay Pride Festival, there are those who view it as simply a cynical money-making exercise on the part of businessmen unconnected with the gay scene. STUART CLARK reports on the brewing controversy.

Music | Interview 36% | 11 Jan 2007
Love minus zero: Snow limit Ed Power
Forget all the chatter about solo albums and injuries sustained on the road: Snow Patrol are revelling in the end of a triumphant year, one which saw Eyes Open become the biggest selling album in the UK in '06, as well as making serious inroads Stateside.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 29 Apr 1998
fear ... loathing Niall Stanage
Yes, you've read that headline somewhere before! But referendum on the Belfast Agreement gets into full swing in the North. Diary: NIALL STANAGE. Pix: peter matthews

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 29 Apr 1998
fear ... loathing Niall Stanage
Yes, you've read that headline somewhere before! But referendum on the Belfast Agreement gets into full swing in the North. Diary: NIALL STANAGE. Pix: peter matthews

Music | Interview 36% | 28 Jul 2003
Calling out around the world Colm O Hare
An Irish band who don’t entirely fit in at home, Relish can console themslves with a great new album Karma Calling, and an international fanbase that stretches from the U.S. to Japan.

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  7 Oct 2005
Last Chance Saloon Tony Cascarino
There's no room for any slip-ups in the two games which will determine Ireland's destiny next summer. words Tony Cascarino

Music | Interview 36% | 28 Jul 2003
Calling out around the world Colm O Hare
An Irish band who don’t entirely fit in at home, Relish can console themslves with a great new album Karma Calling, and an international fanbase that stretches from the U.S. to Japan.

Politics | Frontlines 36% |  5 Aug 1998
Under Current Affairs Adrienne Murphy
Fed up with a bland diet of infotainment, Adrienne Murphy looked beneath the surface of news and discovered some exciting Undercurrents.

Hot Features | Commentary 36% | 17 Sep 1997
SHOOTING FROM THE HIP Cathy Dillon
That a bonefide Irish film industry actually exists is no small achievement, but with a new Minister For The Arts now in place, this is hardly the time for complacency. To ascertain how best the industry can be maintained and developed, Hot Press film critic, cathy dillon, canvassed the views of a number of key players.

Politics | Hog 36% | 21 Jun 2002
Different strokes The Hog
The times may well be changing but are we any wiser after 25 years of getting older?

Hot Features | Interview 36% |  1 Nov 2002
Extraordinary joe Tara Brady
Actor Peter Mullan first achieved mainstream success with his brilliant leading role in 1998’s My Name Is Joe, for which he received a best actor award at Cannes. His latest project concerns the abuse of young women by the Catholic Church in the Magdalen Sisters, which he wrote and directed

Music | Interview 36% |  2 Dec 1996
Belfast Cowboys Peter Murphy
How Jools Holland, Jo Brand and peter alexander ended up wrestling on the floor while a woman dressed as a giraffe offered them beer. Or, if you prefer your sub-heads sedate: peter murphy meets The vivid.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 11 Jan 1995
A FAREWELL to ARMS Joe Jackson
He may have done time in Long Kesh for possession of explosives but Progressive Unionist leader DAVID ERVINE has left behind his terrorist past and embraced a future based on shared social democracy which, he says, the peace process can bring about. Interview: JOE JACKSON.

Politics | Frontlines 36% | 15 Apr 1998
PLAYING WITH FIRE? Niall Stokes
The Republic of Ireland's pallid 2-0 defeat by Argentina in last week's international friendly showed that MICK McCARTHY's time and resources are becoming increasingly limited, as Yugoslavia and Croatia loom over the horizon in the Euro 2000 qualifiers. NIALL STOKES asks: "What is to be done?"

Music | Interview 36% | 19 Oct 1984
Night And Day John Waters
Formerly, by his own admission, a perfectionist, an arch-worrier and an all-round uptight individual, Paul Brady is slowly but surely learning how to relax. As his Full Moon album rises, John Waters takes a long, close look at Paul Brady in a new light.

Music | Interview 36% | 18 Nov 2008
Flame Academy The Hot Press Newsdesk
North-of-the-border scenester Paul Archer is back with a thrilling new project, Burning Codes. He talks about moving to Britain, becoming a father, and when Snow Patrol supported one of his gigs.

Music | Interview 36% | 28 Jul 1993
THE FAT LADY TALKS Liam Fay
. . . and talks and talks. But when it's NICK KELLY doing the talking, he's always worth listening to, whether what's under discussion is Leonard Cohen, french polishing amid plastic furniture, the brain-numbing efficiency of the music industry or the long-term future of the FAT LADY SINGS. LIAM FAY has plenty of time for him but barely enough tape.

Politics | Hog 36% | 17 Dec 2003
The year of two fingers The Hog
The Whole Hog and other regular Hot Press columnists, look back on a year in which, with some notable exceptions, the message seemed to be – up yours.

Politics | Frontlines 36% |  6 Oct 1993
TO SPEAK OR NOT TO SPEAK Gerry McGovern
The case for and against Holocaust Revisionist and Nazi apologist DAVID IRVING being allowed to speak on a public platform in Ireland. For: GERRY McGOVERN. Against: EAMONN McCANN

Politics | Frontlines 36% |  1 Dec 1993
A Tale of 2 Cities Bill Graham
Over the past twenty-five years, attitudes and experiences in the North’s two biggest cities, Belfast and Derry, have been markedly and vitally different. To understand why may help us to define both the opportunities for and the obstacles to peaceful change. Report: BILL GRAHAM

Music | Interview 36% | 10 Apr 2003
Independent spirit Sarah McQuaid
News, gossip, gigs and new releases from the world of trad and folk.

Music | Interview 36% | 20 Jun 2002
It was 25 years ago today The Hot Press Newsdesk
That was now and this is then. Hot Press puts the question, "where were you in 1977? and what have you been up to since?"

Music | Interview 36% |  2 Dec 1996
Belfast Cowboys Peter Murphy
How Jools Holland, Jo Brand and Peter Alexander ended up wrestling on the floor while a woman dressed as a giraffe offered them beer. Or, if you prefer your sub-heads sedate: Peter Murphy meets The vivid.

Music | Interview 36% | 30 Mar 2000
Crown Prince Fergie Mark Kavanagh
At the tender age of 20, he s already the most successful Irish DJ ever. Mark Kavanagh chats to Fergie, the first Irish DJ tipped for Premier League superstardom.

Music | Interview 36% | 10 Aug 2009
Whatever Happened To The Likely Pads? Stuart Clark
It’s no rest for the wicket, as Stuart Clark gets bowled over by the DUCKWORTH LEWIS METHOD. Musical odd-couple Neil Hannon and Thomas Walsh explain why they decided to record a musical homage to cricket and talk about hanging out with Blur’s Damon Albarn, the Governor of the Bank of England and Sir Tim Rice.

Music | Interview 36% | 16 Feb 2007
Choir as folk Colin Carberry
There’s a strange din echoing around Belfast these days. It can only be sometime satanists, occasional folkies and day-tripper pagans The Factotum Choir.

Music | Interview 36% |  7 Nov 2003
Snow On The Pitch Tanya Sweeney
Tanya Sweeney catches up with Ireland’s hardest partying rockers Snow Patrol to discuss on-the-road hi-jinks, the band’s hallowed status in the Scottish and Irish music scenes, and also bears witness to that long-awaited footie showdown with Thomastown under 15s.

Music | Interview 36% |  8 Mar 2007
There is a light that never goes out: Tribute to Jim Aiken 1932 - 2007  
Promoter Jim Aiken, who passed away recently, was a hugely important and universally admired figure in the Irish music scene. Here, leading industry representatives pay tribute. (free content)

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 13 Apr 2000
AC/PD Niall Stanage
Sorry, we couldn t resist it! But then PETER KELLY is that rare figure in Irish life an openly gay mainstream politician. NIALL STANAGE meets the Cork Progressive Democrat who believes that the liberal agenda is far from finished. Pix: CATHAL DAWSON.

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 29 Apr 1998
First Degree Murder Adrienne Murphy
With his new book, How To Murder A Man, novelist CARLO GÉBLER has written a compelling account of the hatred and animosity that fuelled Ireland's land war of the 19th century. Here, he discusses the ideas behind his work and the motives that drive him, with ADRIENNE MURPHY. Pics: Colm Henry

Music | Interview 36% | 10 Oct 1987
A Pilgrim's Progress Damian Corless
In Dublin recently to lend his support to the AIDS Action Alliance all-star Olympic Ballroom bash, Tom Robinson took time out to reflect on his Spokesman For A Generation past, his nervous breakdowns, his sexual re-orientation and his re-embracement of the Quaker faith

Hot Features | Interview 36% | 10 Aug 2009
In The Prime Time Of Her Life Jason O'Toole
Current affairs anchor – and Ireland's leading ‘yummy mummy’ according to the tabloids – MIRIAM O'CALLAGHAN talks about the challenges of raising eight children, her past marital woes and taking a pay cut at RTÉ.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 26 Aug 2005
Somebody Out There Is Watching You Rory Hearne
Civil liberties in Ireland are being gradually eroded. But, then, it’s just part of an international trend. If we’re not careful, we will we soon be living in a Big Brother nation.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 16 Nov 2005
Here comes the mirror man Stuart Clark
As editor of the Daily Mirror and News of The World Piers Morgan was one of the most powerful men in Fleet Street. He cultivated an influential circle of friends and enemies, among them Tony Blair, Naomi Campbell and -oh yes- Sinéad O'Connor.

Hot Features | Commentary 35% |  1 Oct 1997
The North FOYLED AGAIN Stuart Bailie
Occasionally, music from Derry effects the wider scheme of things with spectacular results. This year, the fun centred on the use of D:Ream?s ?Things Can Only Get Better? as a Labour Party anthem. The touchy-feely, get-off-your-arse-and-participate message of the song was just what Tony Blair wanted for his born-again campaign theme.

Music | Interview 35% | 19 Mar 2004
What Katie did next Danielle Brigham
From studying at the Brit School of Performing Arts and providing backing vocals for Westlife, to her Terry Wogan-facilitated assault on the charts and subsequent elevation to bona-fide star status, former Belfast resident Katie Melua has packed an enormous amount into her 19 years.

Music | Interview 35% |  9 Jan 2007
Don't look back in anger John Walshe
Annual article: John Walshe casts a reflective eye over the domestic music scene over the course of 2006.

Hot Features | Commentary 35% | 12 May 1999
Oh Bondage, Up Yours Again! George Byrne
To mark the occasion of the release of a near definitive punk compilation, GEORGE BYRNE fondly recalls the days when pogo was go-go and gabba gabba was hey.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 31 Jul 2006
Super tran returns Tara Brady
When he’s not playing the evil criminal mastermind in Hollywood blockbusters, Eddie Izzard can be found wandering the corridors of the European Parliament with Tony Blair. Tara Brady gets a yes, no and maybe from the nail polish-loving English comedian.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 10 Jun 1998
Over And Out For The Touts? Peter Murphy
A Private Members' Bill which aims to put ticket touts out of business will come before the Dail in September. Here we talk to some of the scalpers themselves, to get their reaction. By Peter Murphy.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 29 Oct 1997
MOORE than this Liam Fay
Avuncular Belfast-born writer brian moore may continually encounter difficulties in getting people to pronounce his name correctly, but one thing he s never had trouble with is the quality of his literary output. His latest effort, The Magician s Wife, is yet another effortlessly elegant concoction of seamless prose. Interview: liam fay. Pix: Cathal Dawson

Politics | Hog 35% | 16 Nov 1994
Will the Future Work? Dermot Stokes
An old friend of mine used to regularly take out a word and fondle it like a friendly animal. A very Irish amusement, I think. One particular favourite was the word “worrying”, as in dogs “worrying sheep”.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 24 Feb 2004
With a little help from my friends Colm O Hare
There are no guarantees of success in the music biz, but if you have what it takes there is plenty of expert help available to ensure you give it your best shot.

Music | Interview 35% | 20 Aug 1997
POP:THE QUESTIONS Mike Edgar
Having steamrolled its way across America, and through most of Europe, it seemed as if U2 s PopMart extravaganza might come to grief in the most unlikely of places their homeland of Ireland. Now however, one Supreme Court case on, U2 are scheduled to play not just two Dublin dates but a newly-added Belfast homecoming as well. Interview: MIKE EDGAR

Music | Interview 35% | 27 Sep 2002
Boy George, he's still got it Stephen Robinson
Taking time out from a hectic schedule of stage, studio and club work the one and only Boy George sets the record straight on Eminem, Graham Norton, Elton John and the new homophobia

Hot Features | Commentary 35% |  7 Jul 1999
Twisted Blood Liam Mackey
In the definitive life of two halves, GEORGE BEST has been both the supreme footballer and a raddled alcoholic . With a new paperback biography just published and a movie version of his life on the way, LIAM MACKEY reflects on the genie who got trapped by the bottle.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 24 Aug 1994
KITSCH ’N’ SYNC Liam Fay
The Miss Ireland competition is in its 45th year. Liam Fay went along to the Burlington Hotel final to come to (metaphorical) grips with the assets of Miss Irish Sun Newspaper, among others. He found the experience deeply embarrassing. Pix: Colm Henry.

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  7 Sep 1994
UNION SUNDOWN Bill Graham
In the wake of the IRA’s complete cessation of violence, the Unionist community must engage in a process of re-defintion – because while they have been clinging to the last vestiges of the British Empire, the world around them has been transformed. By Bill Graham.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 11 Apr 2007
The wearing of the green Jason O'Toole
He has strong views on Republicanism, Israel, George Bush and Steve Staunton. But, as a TD for Dublin South Central, Michael Mulcahy also reveals how much he loves Fianna Fáil – and how he wouldn’t mind a coalition with the Greens.

Hot Features | Commentary 35% | 30 Aug 2001
Staring At The Sun Colm O Hare
Somebody up there likes us -that's for sure! Slane Castle 4pm on Saturday 25th August 2001 and the sun is shining down through deep blue skies like it hasn’t done all summer.

Music | Interview 35% | 29 Jan 2008
A walk on the bogside Jason O'Toole
Girls Aloud’s Nadine Coyle talks about her Derry childhood, drug use in the pop industry and explains why she gets irritated when the band are called “British”.

Music | Interview 35% | 18 Sep 2006
The man who came in from the cold Stuart Clark
Champagne corks were popped last week as Snow Patrol joined that elite group of bands who’ve simultaneously topped the charts in Ireland and the UK. It’s all a far cry from the days when their fame was confined to the University of Dundee Students Union bar. Gary Lightbody takes time out from wowing the masses in Dublin and Belfast to tell Stuart Clark about their twisty and turny route to the top.

Hot Features | Commentary 35% | 31 Mar 1999
The Sound of Silence Debbie Skhow
Silence. there is all too little of it. Elevators whimper with muzak, grocery stores boom non-stop consumer announcements , college dormitories wail a grotesque collage of Robbie Williams and The Doors.

Music | Interview 35% | 26 Oct 2004
He was Ireland's answer to Bob Dylan Jackie Hayden
On the release of a double CD retrospective of his forty years as a performer-songwriter, Johnny McEvoy talks to Jackie Hayden about his early days as Ireland’s answer to Bob Dylan, meeting the great man himself, supporting and introducing The Rolling Stones, defending The Wolfe Tones, not apologising for the troubles in the North, U2 and the key albums that have inspired him.

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  8 Sep 1993
Left at the Crossroads Gerry McGovern
With close to forty TDs in the Dáil, and Labour in government with Fianna Fáil, the parties of the left have undergone something of a renaissance in Ireland over the past few years. There are those, however, who view this as a grand illusion, arguing that the cause of socialism is being ill-served by our elected representatives. Meanwhile, following the collapse of the East European model of communism, the left is experiencing a crisis of its own. GERRY McGOVERN talks to the activists who see themselves as carrying the socialist torch and profiles the parties who have yet to make an impact at the polls. Pix: CATHAL DAWSON.

Music | News 35% | 11 Feb 2003
Coral reefed The Hot Press Newsdesk
The Coral announce rescheduled dates for Ireland

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 19 Jun 2009
Not so junior minister Jason O'Toole
He's been described as the 'intellectual powerhouse of Fianna Fail'. As the party goes into electoral meltdown special advisor to the Taoiseach turned Junior Minister Martin Mansergh talks about George Lee, the Government's unpopularity and the prejudices faced by a member of the Anglo-Irish community who dared go into politics.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 30 Jun 2009
Battle of the DJs Donna Legge
Radio Ulster’s Donna Legge ensures there’s no punching below the belt as she and two of the north’s other leading DJs - Maurice Jay and Johnny Hero - come together to discuss the local music scene, on-air rows with James Galway and prank calls to Sellafield.

Politics | Hog 35% |  3 Mar 1999
A Gubu Nation Once Again The Hog
Sometimes, you look at what is happening in the Moriarty and Flood Tribunals and just wonder...

Music | Interview 35% | 31 May 2006
Mind, Lightbody & soul Stuart Clark
Snow Patrol‘s Gary Lightbody may be the thinking woman’s indie sexpot, but with their new album Eyes Open going supernova all over the shop, the poor fella has no time to capitalise on his status, given that the only people he sees on a regular basis are his band and crewmates. With whom, he assures us, “penetrative sex is out of the question.” Also on the agenda: break-ups, infidelity, the Northern body politic, U2 and, of course, underpants.

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  5 Jun 1986
The Bertie Boy Michael O'Higgins
Michael O'Higgins interviews Bertie Ahern, one of Fianna Fail's young tigers and a man many are tipping as a future leader of the party and possible Taoiseach

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 23 May 2007
Gerry's big adventure Jason O'Toole
As the dust settles on the Northern Peace deal and Sinn Fein gears up for an election in the Republic, Gerry Adams talks about his journey from political outcast to statesman, Bono's knighthood and what’s on his iPod.

Hot Features | Commentary 35% | 11 Jan 1995
OLD HAYDEN’S ALMANAC Jackie Hayden
JACKIE HAYDEN, the great sage - and scourge - of this fair isle fondles his crystal ball and reveals all...

Music | News 35% |  6 Mar 2003
NEWSFLASH The Hot Press Newsdesk
Radiohead to play The Waterfront in Belfast

Music | News 35% |  7 Mar 2008
The Police to play Stormont Castle The Hot Press Newsdesk
Having played to 80,000 people last year in Croke Park, The Police have confirmed that they’re returning to Ireland for a June 20 show in the grounds of Belfast’s Stormont Castle.

Music | Interview 35% | 28 Jul 1993
ON THE LEVEL Stuart Clark
STUART CLARK INDULGES IN SOME TOILET HUMOUR WITH CHARLIE FROM THE LEVELLERS

Music | Interview 35% | 24 Oct 1981
Irish Ways ... Irish Laws Bill Graham
The Moving Hearts Interview by Bill Graham

Music | Interview 35% | 30 Mar 2007
A Jason once again Paul Nolan
He’s spent years trying to live down his bubble-gum pop days but, two decades after the event, former hearthrob Jason Donovan is finally going back to his roots.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 24 Aug 1994
OUT OF THE CLOSET Liam Fay
They are a hunted species, forced to live out their lives in covert(s) under constant threat from marauding hounds and their society masters. You’d imagine that a fox would know something about what it feels like to be gay in ’90s Ireland but not johnny fox, the independent TD for Wicklow. Here, he unleashes an unrestrained attack on homosexuality, the practice of which he believes should never have been decriminalised in this country. For good measure, he also has a go at the government’s ‘liberal agenda’, the European Community, Bord Fáilte and the standard of refereeing at GAA football matches. Interview: Liam Fay. Pics: Cathal Dawson

Music | Interview 35% | 22 May 2002
Bang a gong! John Walshe
John Walshe had a ringside seat for all the music, speeches, laughs and tears that made the 2002 hotpress Irish Music Awards in Belfast a night to remember.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  2 Jan 2007
The Glasgow team Craig Fitzsimons
Thirty nine years ago a British soccer team won the European Cup for the first time: Glasgow Celtic veterans Billy McNeill and Tommy Gemmell look back at their triumph in Lisbon.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 15 Oct 2007
Take me to your leader Jason O'Toole
No problem! Eamon Gilmore has just taken over at the helm of the Labour Party. Here, in a wide-ranging interview, he talks about Bertie Ahern, the future of Labour, Gay marriage, God, abortion, bias in the media – and a whole lot more besides.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 20 Aug 2004
Conor Lenihan in the Hot Press Interview Paul Nolan
A member of one of the most famous political families in the country, Conor Lenihan gave up a career in journalism to follow his late father brian into politics. Tipped for promotion in Bertie Ahern’s September reshuffle, the rising star talks to Hot Press about Charlie McCreevy, Charlie Haughey. His father’s political downfall and the future of Fianna Fail. [Photos: Liam Sweeney]

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 20 Feb 2006
Father of dissent Craig Fitzsimons
An icon of the radical left, Noam Chomsky has long been one of the fiercest critics of US foreign policy. During a rare visit to Ireland, he explains why the Bush Presidency might be the most dangerous yet.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  2 Dec 1996
I’d Rather Jack Cathy Dillon
Belfast filmmaker John T. Davis on Uncle Jack, a troubled but ultimately cathartic labour of love commemmorating his late uncle’s achievements as a cinema architect. Interview: Cathy Dillon.

Music | Interview 35% | 18 Oct 1979
John McKenna meets the men of Horslips John McKenna
John McKenna meets the men of Horslips

Music | Interview 35% | 23 Feb 1994
Undercover Blues Liam Fay
Liam Fay teams up with the IMRO hit squad as they venture north to Monaghan in search of bars, discos and other such venues that do not have a licence to thrill, or at least a licence for the public performing of music.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 15 Oct 1997
DryWIT Barry Glendenning
owen O Neill almost drowned a promising comedy career in drink. Now, with the bottle firmly corked, his harrowing experience of alcoholism is fuelling his most powerful one-man show to date. Interview: barry glendenning.

Hot Features | Commentary 35% | 22 Feb 1995
Looking after Number 2 Stuart Clark
Or perhaps that's 27 under the present squad numbering system. JEFF KENNA may be living in Garry Kelly's international shadow but that doesn't mean the former Palmerstown Rangers full-back isn't one of the Premiereship's brightest prospects and a genuine contender for the Ireland team as the Green Army advances towards the European Championships. Interview and bollocking from Jack Charlton: STUART CLARK Pix: COLM HENRY

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 23 May 2007
The bearing of the Greens Jason O'Toole
With the opinion polls predicting a tight finish in the upcoming General Election, there is an increasing likelihood that the Greens will play a part in the next Government. So what is their leader Trevor Sargent really made of?

Music | Interview 35% | 15 Dec 1993
Girls On Top Joe Jackson
Never met a dyke he didn t like! Joe Jackson boogies the night away with Zrazy, one of Irish music s most determined combos. 1993 saw this radical lesbian dance due release their debut album in the face of widescale indifference from the national media and here they tell of their struggle to assert their music and sexuality against overwhelming odds.

Music | Interview 35% |  8 Jun 2000
OUT OF THE BLACK Colm O Hare
JULIET TURNER seems to have turned an emotional corner with her more effervescent new album Burn The Black Suit. Here she talks to COLM O'HARE about faith, hope and songwriting

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 25 Aug 1993
THE WORK AESTHETIC Joe Jackson
In the second part of a major interview concerning his brief as Minister for Arts, Culture and the Gaeltacht - and his vision for the future of the Arts in Ireland - MICHAEL D. HIGGINS talks about the enormous potential for job creation in the related areas of film, music and heritage, the changes he would like to see in the tax-free status afforded to artists and answers his critics in relation to Section 31 of the Broadcasting Act. Interview: JOE JACKSON

Music | Interview 35% |  7 Dec 2000
Sharon Corr Niall Stokes
Niall Stokes: People would make an assumption that since The Corrs have sold millions of records, you ve already got it made. Does it feel like that to you?

Music | Interview 35% | 26 Jan 1994
DOWN ON THE Farm Stuart Clark
STEPHEN MORRIS takes time out from humming the theme to Green Acres and terrorising everyone within a five-mile radius of his newly-aquired Yorkshire farm (with his equally newly-acquired heavy artillery) to talk to STUART CLARK about his and Gillian Gilbert's New Order offshoot The Other Two.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 13 May 1998
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION Stuart Bailie
U2 and Ash played Belfast to support the Yes Vote in the Belfast Agreement. Hot Press columnist Stuart Bailie was the compére for the evening. And it rocked, big style.

Music | Interview 35% | 15 Dec 1993
Girls on Top Joe Jackson
Never met a dyke he didn’t like! Joe Jackson boogies the night away with ZRAZY, one of Irish music’s most determined combos. 1993 saw this radical lesbian dance duo release their debut album in the face of widescale indifference from the national media and here they tell of their struggle to assert their music and sexuality against overwhelming odds.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 29 Nov 2001
Just say know Jackie Hayden
The Government recently launched its National Anti-Racism Awareness Programme under the slogan "Know Racism". JACKIE HAYDEN talked to the Chairman of its Steering Committee, JOE MCDONAGH

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 15 Dec 1993
THE AMERICAN DREAM Niall Stokes
The end of the Republic of Ireland’s World Cup qualifying campaign was deeply unimpressive, not so much for the poverty of the results as for the manner in which they were achieved. And just when everyone was breathing a collective sigh of relief at the whisker-fine nature of our qualification, worse was to follow with the news of Niall Quinn’s critical knee injury. So what is the best way forward for Jack Charlton’s embattled troops? Analysis: Niall Stokes

Music | Interview 35% | 17 Sep 1982
From the hills of Gweedore to Top Of The Pops! Niall Stokes
As Clannad storm the charts, Niall Stokes reports on perhaps the most outstanding success story of the year

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  9 Jul 1997
MIRREN, MIRREN ON THE WALL . . Joe Jackson
. . . who is the sexiest of them all? Helen MIRREN, apparently, at least according to readers of the Radio Times, who recently voted her the sexiest woman on TV. Which may be flattering but possibly also does a disservice to a gifted actress who has no qualms about speaking her mind whether on nudity, money, the stage, television or even the cowardly assholes who bomb for Ireland. Interview: Joe Jackson

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  8 May 2007
Take me to your leader Jason O'Toole
As the General Election looms, many polls suggest Fine Gael leader Enda Kenny is the next Taoiseach in waiting. So what is he really like? And where does he stand on the issues that matter to Hot Press readers?

Music | Interview 35% |  4 Feb 1998
THE SHANKILL THRILLER Stuart Bailie
On the face of it, the show is like any other Brian Kennedy night. Young girls become giddy. Mothers are impassioned as they shove themselves to the front, wailing along with the words and leaving piles of flowers at the singer s feet. The singer, bless his heart, is trilling and wowing at the reception, resplendent in crushed velvet, letting his all-embracing charms soften up the crowd.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  1 Apr 1998
NOBODY TOLD ME THERE D BE HAYES LIKE THESE Liam Fay
brian hayes is a 28-year-old Fine Gael TD who represents the constituency of Dublin South West. At the last general election, he virtually tripled Fine Gael s vote in the Tallaght area. He opposes the legalisation of cannabis, claims that feminists need to have a fundamental re-think on their current position, feels guilty about not attending Mass regularly, and reckons that You need order in society . . . you need people who know what they re about . Is this the face of young, politically aware Ireland? Interview: liam fay. Pics: colm henry.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 23 May 2007
The man who would be king Jason O'Toole
*That* Hot Press interview with Brian Cowen from May 2007.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 17 Feb 1999
Star Trekker Peter Murphy
History is likely to remember FW de KLERK as the man whose most significant political accomplishment ensured his own political downfall. Peter Murphy meets the last South African President to hold power in the era of apartheid. Pic: COLM HENRY.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 25 Mar 2008
John The Revelator Jason O'Toole
As the FAI's chief executive and the public face of Irish football, John Delaney has come in for savage public criticism over the last couple of years.

Music | News 35% | 26 Apr 2005
Tennent’s digital T festival announces programme The Hot Press Newsdesk
Plump DJs, LTJ Bukem, Roni Size and the James Taylor Quartet are among the international artists appearing at this year's festival

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 24 Jul 2007
Instant Karma's going to get you Peter Murphy
A breathtaking variety of acts have come together - as Lennon might have put it - to focus attention on the ongoing genocide in Darfur, under the auspices of Amnesty International.

Music | Interview 35% | 15 Mar 2001
My Regeneration Olaf Tyaransen
New album, new look, new attitude: having turned the big three-oh, DIVINE COMEDY's Neil Hannon says he's much more sure of his place in the world. "Basically, the one thing I have to offer humanity is a good time with interesting words," he tells Olaf Tyaransen. Divine camera intervention: MICK QUINN

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 17 Dec 1987
Under Fire Kate Shanahan
With anti-Republican sentiment running high in the wake of the Enniskillen massacre and the O’Grady kidnapping, and with the first wave of joint RUC-Garda arms searches in progress, Kate Shanahan travelled to Belfast for an exclusive interview with Sinn Féin President, Gerry Adams. In it, the Westminster MP recalls his childhood in Belfast, evaluates the position the IRA now find themselves in and outlines his personal views on subjects as diverse as abortion, the Catholic Church, Dessie O’Hare, Bono and the role of violence in the Republican struggle.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 25 Jan 1995
The snuff legends are made of Liam Fay
Liam Fay talks to the three men behind the first “unmissable” movie smash of '95 SHALLOW GRAVE and hears why comparisons with the American death-and-glory tradition are a misnomer.

Music | Interview 35% | 17 Sep 1997
Born to Run? Liam Fay
In a presidential nomination field virtually devoid of candidates of real calibre and charisma, the name of ex-Boomtown Rat and Live Aid hero BOB GELDOF has cropped up again and again. Despite his outright denial that he will run for office, the rumour refuses to die away. Here, in an interview with LIAM FAY, he gives his assessment of Mary Robinson s seven years in the job, and his hopes for the future occupants of Aras an Uachtarain.

Music | Interview 35% | 12 Jan 2007
Future shock  
John Walshe and Neil Brennan gaze into their crystal balls and predict the Irish acts set to cause a stir in 2007.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 10 Aug 1989
The Other Charlie Joe Jackson
As the major force in the "Club of '22", whose attempts to oust Charlie Haughey from the leadership of Fianna Fail finally resulted in Dessie O'Malley's departure to form the Progressive Democrats, Charlie McCreevy was long considered a thorn in the side of the Taoiseach by the party faithful. Ironically then, it was McCreevy himself who was to be instrumental in setting up the talks with the P.D.s following the recent election which would result in Charles J. Haughey continuing to stay in power in a new kind of coalition government. Generally regarded as one of the most candid of Irish politicians, Charlie McCreevy here lives up to his reputation as he shoots from the hip on matters both political and personal.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 25 Aug 2006
Look what they've done to my mother tongue Craig Fitzsimons
Journalist STEVEN POOLE has, inspired by Orwell, written a riveting book documenting the insidious abuses of the English language perpetrated by politicians and powermongers.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  5 Mar 2008
Colin and Brendan's guide to movie stardom Tara Brady
On the eve of the release of Martin McDonagh's In Bruges, A-list actors Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson give Hot Press the idiot's guide to making it in the movie business.

Music | Interview 35% | 13 Sep 2001
Blowing back to front Olaf Tyaransen
After a lengthy silence, TRICKY is back with an impressively upbeat new album. But the man himself still insists on going against the grain. Here he talks about his aversion to celebrityhood, his dislike of the music biz, his fondness for Bryan Adams and Bono, and how he copes with the terrible burden of having hundreds of women who want to have sex with him. Interview: OLAF TYARANSEN

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 10 May 2007
Shooting from the lip Jason O'Toole
One of the government’s most vocal and effective critics, Labour leader Pat Rabbitte could well be the next Tánaiste. He talks about iPods, happiness, gay marriage, breaking the law - and Enda Kenny’s hairdo.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  4 Sep 2002
Jimi Mistry Tara Brady
He debuted in East is East, became a household face in Eastenders and has finally gone west to star in the bollywood meets hollywood movie, The Guru. The son of an Indian father and Irish mother, he talks here about his thrash metal past, the difficulties of being an Asian actor and why Alan Hansen and Mark Lawrenson are his spiritual gurus.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 25 Jan 2005
Old Hayden’s Almanac 2005 Jackie Hayden
It’s the guide Ladbrokes, the Central Bank, Mystic Meg and Mark Lawrenson turn to at the start of each year – Jackie Hayden’s cultural, sporting and political forecasts for the forthcoming twelve months.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 20 Oct 1993
Out of the Blue into the Black Joe Jackson
ALI HEWSON is the first time presenter of Black Wind White Land, a documentary on the devastation which has blighted Bylorus since the nuclear accident in Chernobyl. Interview: Joe Jackson.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 11 Jul 2008
The zen of Ken Olaf Tyaransen
Former London Mayor Ken Livingstone talks about toffs in politics, Tony versus Gordon and sheds light on his own intervention in the Troubles, at the height of the bloodshed.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 26 May 1999
The Last Temptation Of Annie Nightinggale Andy Darlington
Annie Nightingale on BBC Radio One is Dance Music s fixture for insomniac clubbers. But for the BBC s first-ever female DJ this is just the latest incarnation of a career that began, sort-of, by insulting John Lennon. ANDY DARLINGTON reads the book, sits in on the show, and even finds time for an interview.

Hot Features | Commentary 35% | 11 Jan 1995
You Can Quote Me On That! Stuart Clark
The funny, sad, prophetic and sometimes pathetic things said to Hot Press in 1994. Delving through the files: Stuart Clark

Music | News 35% | 29 Aug 2006
Scissor Sisters return to Ireland The Hot Press Newsdesk
Scissor Sisters are to play two shows in Ireland in November.

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  6 Oct 1993
Game without Frontiers Stuart Clark
A win next week and we're there - but what lies in store for Irish supporters if Big Jack's men do qualify for America? Long suffering England fan Stuart Clark was in the States this summer for US Cup '93 and found that if the dress rehearsal is anything to go by, the World Cup Finals should be a sporting event to savour. Main pix: Simon Parry.

Music | Interview 35% | 23 Jun 2003
Giving good hedonism Stuart Clark
Despite plenty of years of mayhem, Therapy? are not only surviving but thriving – at least in Amsterdam where, as you might expect, Stuart Clark spends a nice restful time with the boys.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 27 Apr 2000
Eddie Rocket Niall Stanage
EDDIE IRVINE is Ireland s leading sporting playboy. The Grand Prix driver is a multi-millionaire whose taste for the extravagant runs to owning a private jet, a yacht and around ten cars. Here, the ladies man of Formula One talks to NIALL STANAGE about sex, drink, drugs, rock n roll oh, and driving.

Politics | Frontlines 35% |  9 Jul 1997
The Word According To Caoimhghmn O Caolain Liam Fay
Sinn Fiin s first sitting TD since 1918 chooses his words carefully for the Hot Press Political Interview. I m not measured or calculating, he explains, this is me. As I am. LIAM FAY fires the questions. Pix: CATHAL DAWSON.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  9 Nov 2007
The Quiet Man Jason O'Toole
Senate leader Donie Cassidy, a reluctant interviewee, opens up about his rivalry with Fianna Fail colleague Mary O'Rourke and reminisces about his days in the show-band business.

Politics | Frontlines 35% | 16 Jun 1993
By The Time I Get To The Phoenix... Liam Fay
...I'll be suing you left, right and centre you shower of *!*!*! . . . or words to that effect. Liam Fay talks to Phoenix editor Paddy Prendiville.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 11 May 2007
Belfast's least wanted man Olaf Tyaransen
Commander of the notorious Company C of the UDA in Belfast, Johnny Adair was given 16 years for directing terrorism. While he was never convicted of murder, the rumour mill suggests that he has been reponsible for as many as 43 deaths.

Hot Features | Interview 35% | 10 Mar 2003
The screen writer Tara Brady
These days he may be more famous for his movies than his prose, but in conversation Neil Jordan remains linguistically precise as he dissects the Hollywood machine, reveals his love for Lord Of The Rings and discusses his latest movie The Good Thief, starring Nick Nolte.

Music | Interview 35% | 22 Jul 1998
KING OF THE INDEPENDENTS Peter Murphy
At the end of the last decade, Philip King was best known as a founder member of Scullion and writer of the music to the Frank O’Connor translation of the Irish lyric ‘I Am Stretched On Your Grave’. However, since setting up Hummingbird Productions with his partners Nuala O’Connor and Kieran Corrigan in 1987, he has established himself as one of the country’s leading makers of films about Irish music and culture, including acclaimed series such as Bringing It All Back Home, A River Of Sound, and Sult. Here he talks to Peter Murphy about the current Irish climate for independent film-makers, his stop-start relationship with RTE, and post-Riverdance Irishry. Pics: Cathal Dawson

Music | Interview 35% |  8 Jan 2003
And you can quote me on that Liam Mackey
And we did. and now we’re doing it again. Liam Mackey rounds up the maddest, baddest and most memorable sayings in Hot Press over the last 12 months

Hot Features | Commentary 35% | 27 Jan 2003
Old Hayden's Almanac Jackie Hayden
It’s the astrological event of the year as Jackie Hayden consults his crystal mirror ball to predict what’s in store for us in 2003

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  3 Feb 2009
Once in never out Jason O'Toole
It is an old Republican principle. But it could also be applied to the attitude the authorities have taken to Ireland’s longest serving political prisoners, Paddy McCann and Colm O’Shea. Jailed for the killing of two Gardai during a bank raid in Roscommon in 1980, as the peace process reached its final stages they were asked to sign up to the Good Friday Agreement. They subsequently put their names on the dotted line. That was ten years ago. So why have they not been released in the meantime, like dozens of other former Paramilitary activists? In an extraordinary, confessional interview, PADDY MCCANN makes his case against the State.

Hot Features | Interview 35% |  9 Jul 1997
Caoimhghín O'Caoláin Liam Fay
Sinn Féin’s first sitting TD since 1918 chooses his words carefully for the Hot Press Political Interview. “I’m not measured or calculating,” he explains, “this is me. As I am.” Liam Fay fires the questions. Pic: Cathal Dawson

Music | Interview 35% |  5 Sep 1991
THE TRUTH, THE WHOLE TRUTH AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH Joe Jackson
n a career spanning 25 years in the glare of the stagelight, CHRISTY MOORE has known every emotion from insecurity, despair and vilification to adulation, triumph and the warm glow of creative fulfilment. He has dabbed in drugs, drink to excess, suffered a heart attack for his troubles and made some of the finest records that have ever been subjected to critical scrutiny in this country. Now, in a frighteningly honest interview, he tells it like it is and was. Cross-examination: JOE JACKSON. Microscopic camerawork: COLM HENRY.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% | 24 Aug 1994
AN INDUSTRY IN THE MAKING Colm O Hare
Colm O’Hare reports on the latest developments in the Irish film world which – thanks to initiatives spearheaded by Michael D. Higgins, Minister of Arts, Culture and the Gaeltacht – is experiencing an unprecedented boom period.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 26 Jan 1994
PEAK PERFORMANCE Siobhan Long
29,028 feet above sea level: that’s where Dawson Stelfox found himself last year when he successfully completed the first Irish Everest expedition. Interview: Síobhan Long.

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  2 Jun 1993
THE HAIR APPARENT Liam Fay
MICHAEL NOONAN may be the most follicularly-challenged member of the Fine Gael front bench but he is also seen by some as the party's leader in waiting, the only person capable of bringing about the kind of revitalisation which has so conspicuously eluded John Bruton. Now aged fifty, Noonan was for years known as the man who as Minister for Justice in the mid-eighties exposed the Sean Doherty bugging scandal and ordered the release of Nicky Kelly. More recently, however, he has achieved real fame as a Scrap Saturday caricature. Interview: LIAM FAY.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  8 Jan 1997
Who is GYLES BRANDRETH? Cathal Dawson
Television s best-known wearer of colourful jumpers turned Conservative politician has reinvented himself yet again this time as a writer of credible fiction. PETER MURPHY hears the nice Tory s vice story. Pix: CATHAL DAWSON

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  5 Jul 2001
Eoin Ryan, T.D. Stuart Clark
To give him his full title, he's the Minister of State at the Department of Tourism, Sport and Recreation with responsibility for local development and the National Drugs Strategy. But it's for the latter responsibility that EOIN RYAN TD has earned the unofficial title of "Ireland's Drug Czar". As a new seven-year strategy is unveiled, STUART CLARK enquires about leisure, legalisation, decriminalisation, health, creativity, crime and punishment – and whether or not cannabis really is "a gateway drug". Photographs: PHILLIP TOTTENHAM.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 21 Apr 1993
The Keane Edge Mary Hannigan
At 21 years of age Roy Keane is potentially Ireland’s most expensive ever footballer. Growing in stature at International and Club level, his increasing profile has also brought media attention of a type that hasn’t always been welcome. Here, he talks of his mistrust of the tabloids, coping with fame, his fairytale breakthrough to the top and his ambition to play in Italy at some stage of his career

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 15 Oct 2003
Gerry Adams Olaf Tyaransen
There’s no pipe of peace – in fact no pipe at all from the non-smoking sinn féin leader – as Olaf Tyaransen asks if, given Osama Bin Laden’s use of terror as a political weapon, Gerry Adams might not have some sympathy for the world’s most wanted man. that question and other contentious queries relating to the IRA, Jean McConville and the murder of Garda Jerry McCabe are dealt with in an interview which also takes in Eoghan Harris, George Bush and Bono, and ends with the interviewee humming a familiar Monty Python tune.

Music | Interview 34% |  9 Feb 1994
DIGGING THE NEW BREED George Byrne
With 1993 going down as the year that Irish rock finally emerged from U2’s shadow, HOT PRESS takes an introductory look at four of the rapidly emerging outfits that are poised to make headlines and sell bucket–loads of records in ’94. Schtum, Ash, Joyrider, Compulsion.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% | 26 Jan 1994
HIT THE ROAD, JACK! Jackie Hayden
Many Irish holiday-makers will be heading for the United States this year. But there’s much more on offer in that vast playground than the dubious prospect of sweltering in the crushing heat of an Orlando football stadium in June. Jackie Hayden travelled with a bunch of media types to the small town of Lynchburg in Tennessee and visited the source of one of the world’s great spirits, Jack Daniels, making some musical connections along the way.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 18 Mar 2005
Africa Shocks Tara Brady
Irish director Terry George has made one of the most powerful movies of the year in Hotel Rwanda, the Oscar-nominated film that tells the harrowing story of the genocide of the Tutsi tribe by Hutu extremists. Here, the ex-Republican activist – and former hotpress contributor – talks to Tara Brady about collaborating with Nick Nolte, Don Cheadle and Joaquin Phoenix, the challenges of bringing such provocative material to the screen, and why the West's failure to intervene contributed to the scale of the atrocity.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 11 May 2006
The rhyme of his life Colin Carberry
Armagh poet Paul Muldoon has been feted by Seamus Heaney and addressed the United Nations. His forthcoming collection may be his most impressive yet.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 12 Jan 1994
CORKIN’ CORCORAN! Jackie Hayden
From Big Tom and the Mainliners to The Cranberries and, indeed, back again, Alan Corcoran, one of the lower-profile 2FM DJ’s, has been there, seen that, played that. An uncommonly committed supporter of Irish music in Irish airwaves, here Jackie Hayden watches him at work and finds out more.

Music | Interview 34% |  1 Sep 1999
Look Back In Anger Joe Jackson
Powerful evidence of both early experiences of racial prejudice and the premature ending of her relationship with her father is still to be found in the work of NINA SIMONE, one of the few artists alive who gives equal weight and force to the political and the personal. In this rare interview, conducted during her recent visit to Dublin, JOE JACKSON meets a lover and a fighter. Pics: CATHAL DAWSON.

Music | Interview 34% |  1 Oct 1982
Open Hearts Surgery John Waters
Music, politics, H-Blocks, homosexuality, education - the operations of Moving Hearts explained to John Waters.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 22 Feb 1995
A Sharp Left Turn Joe Jackson
Dail Eireann has never been short of socialist mavericks but rarely has a member of government spoken out so emphatically in favour of divorce, abortion and the shackling of the Catholic church as Democratic Left’s EAMON GILMORE. JOE JACKSON meets the agnostic Junior Minister who smoked and inhaled and reckons he'd probably make a better whoremaster than a priest. Pix: Colm Henry.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 22 Sep 1993
Fever Pitch Paul O'Mahony
Since making it's debut in 1964, Match Of The Day has become a national institution watched by an average six million football addicts a week. Paul O'mahony goes behind the scenes at the BBC's longest running sports programme and discovers that the people piecing it together are every bit as commited to the 'beautiful game' as those on the terraces.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 24 Feb 1993
Sargent Up In Arms Joe Jackson
As the only Dail representative of the Green Party, newly-elected TD, Trevor Sargent, has become the most high-profile public face of Irish environmentalism at a time when the entire movement is going through a period of re-definition. In this wide-ranging interview, Sargent argues that the Greens are more than a single issue pressure group and defends the party against changes of innate conservatism and built-in obsolesence. Not surprisingly, however, he also comes out fighting on issues such as animal rights and the ongoing threat of Sellafield.

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  2 Dec 1996
Have I God News For You! Liam Fay
She calls Him her “Great Lover”. He tells her to “call Me Daddy”. At any hour of the day or night Himself is likely to drop into the life of Vassula Ryden for a bit of a chinwag. She, in turn, broadcasts His words to the world at large. All of which means that, in what amounts to the metaphysical journalistic coup of the century, our Liam Fay gets an exclusive interview with The Holy Spirit.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  2 Apr 2008
Speaking his mind Jason O'Toole
For over three decades, the political agitator and columnist Eoghan Harris has been the focus of abundant controversy, consistently raising hackles with views that are seldom less than heretical.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 16 Apr 2003
Lara Marlowe Peter Murphy
A veteran of conflicts in Nicaragua, Somalia, Lebanon, Rwanda, Algeria and the former Yugoslavia, Lara Marlowe is currently best known to readers in Ireland for her compelling and humane reports from Baghdad for the Irish Times. On the eve of what was being billed as a potentially decisive battle for the city, she spoke to Peter Murphy by satellite phone about war and journalism, her personal circumstances and why she believes the invasion of Iraq could still end in catastrophe

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 15 Oct 1997
The NALLY STAND Liam Fay
Former cop, private eye and the only man on the Presidential ballot paper, derek nally is the dark horse candidate who could yet shake up the race for the Park. Here he holds forth on low standards in high places, how Sean Doherty almost destroyed the gardai , the foul treatment of Albert Reynolds, the case for the decriminalisation of prostitution and why he wasn t surprised by J. Edgar Hoover s penchant for frocks. Interview: liam fay. Pix: Cathal dawson.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 15 Dec 1993
THE YEAR IN BRIEF 1993 Liam Fay
LIAM FAY reviews 1993 from the vantage point of the newspapers.

Music | Interview 34% | 17 Aug 2000
Piano Man Man Joe Jackson
PHIL COULTER is far from the muzak-producing bore of caricature. Here, he talks to JOE JACKSON about family tragedy, northern politics, drink binges, having songs covered by Elvis and his experiences working with stars like Van Morrison, Siniad O Connor and Luke Kelly. Portraits: MYLES CLAFFEY

Politics | Hog 34% | 15 Dec 1993
That was the year that was Dermot Stokes
The year began with contrasting and contradictory alignments. On the one hand, the United States were about to invest a new president, a young, rock’n’roll-loving sax-playing boyo from the south called Bill Clinton, offering the possibility of America as the last great hope again.

Music | Interview 34% |  2 Dec 1996
Ash On Delivery Olaf Tyaransen
Dateline: Chicago 1996. Downpatrick's finest make their first big pact with America. Olaf Tyaransen is there to see how the deal goes down.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 14 Dec 1984
Personally speaking John Waters
An interview, the likes of which you've never seen before with Charles J. Haughey, the leader of the Fianna Fail party and the man they call The Boss.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 12 Feb 2008
The Dealer: “Look, the cops might seize a big consignment this week, but that’ll be replaced next week” Jason O'Toole
Here we present a remarkably candid – and sometimes scarifying – interview with one of the top dealers in Ireland.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  4 Nov 2008
Excuse Me, Can I Speak to the Editor? Jason O'Toole
In his first major interview, Aengus Fanning, editor of the Sunday Independent, discusses how he manages the most successful paper in Ireland and the death of Veronica Guerin.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 13 Mar 2006
There’s a riot going on Rory Hearne
But it wasn’t confined to cell block number nine. In fact the whole of Dublin city centre was engulfed as mobs of rioters were given the run of the city by Gardai, in the wake of the protest against the holding of the Love Ulster parade in O’Connell Street. Rory Hearne pieces together the anatomy of a riot.

Music | Interview 34% | 19 Jan 2005
Ones to Watch- 2005 The Hot Press Newsdesk
Hot Press selects 13 – lucky for some! – of the Irish bands and artists most likely to set the rock world alight in 2005. Remember these names...

Music | Interview 34% | 17 Jan 2002
Ash! Bang! Wallop! Kim Porcelli
They came, they saw, they conquered - again. Ash's comeback kid Tim Wheeler looks back over a spectacular year. Angel interceptor: Kim Porcelli

Music | Interview 34% | 25 Jun 2004
Born to be Wilde Stuart Clark
A year ago they were being paid fifty quid a gig, now they’re one of the biggest rock ‘n’ roll bands on the planet and about to take the Oxegen main stage by storm. A pun loving Stuart Clark discovers how Franz Ferdinand have become Top of the Fops.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  3 Sep 1997
if at first you don t succeed,Fry Fry Again! Stuart Clark
BARRY FRY is to football management what Keith Moon was to hotel rooms. During his spells at Barnet, Southend United, Birmingham City and now Peterbough, he s turned upsetting people into an art form. STUART CLARK shares a half-time Bovril with the man who once used 46 different players in a season and is proud to include ticket-touting for Johnny Giles in his C.V. Main pix: Cathal Dawson

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  7 Sep 1994
NEVER MIND THE BOLLOCKS... Joe Jackson
. . . Here’s T.P. McKenna, one of Ireland’s most eminent actors – and a punk at heart. In an outspoken interview he savages Marlon Brando, Joseph Strick, Ian Paisley and Margaret Thatcher – and talks about his desire to be held in the arms of young girls again . . . Interview: JOE JACKSON

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  2 Dec 1996
Politically Incorrect Liam Fay
Did you hear the one about the Clare man who loves Dublin and is less than enamoured with rural Ireland? Or the staunch Labour Party man who doesn’t worship Dick Spring? Or the politician whose fed up to the teeth with political correctness? Then you haven’t heard about PAT UPTON, Labour TD for Dublin South Central. LIAM FAY did, and now it’s your turn. Pix: COLM HENRY

Music | Interview 34% |  1 Mar 2001
A lifetime in music Colm O Hare
BILL WHELAN has been given a Lifetime Achievement award by IMRO. JACKIE HAYDEN outlines the career of the man behind Riverdance

Music | Report 34% | 23 Nov 2006
Edge, this song doesn't have a chorus... Niall Stokes
Niall Stokes draws on his best-selling book Into The Heart: The Stories Behind The Songs Of U2 to offer a unique insight into the way in which some of the greatest songs in the history of popular music came into being.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 30 Nov 1994
WITNESSES TO THE UNSEEN John Farrell
To mark World AIDS Day, JOHN M. FARRELL reports on the continuing socio-political discrimination against those living their lives under the shadow of the deadly virus, and talks to a number of people – mostly teenagers – who fall into the high risk category. This is their story . . .

Music | Interview 34% | 25 Jun 1997
Bury My Heart In The Tudor Rooms Liam Fay
They ve been gigging for 27 years and they were doing Words when Boyzone were still in the balls zone. They are Big Chief Flaming Star, Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull, Little Thunder, Wild Hawk and Dull Knife (not their real names). They are THE INDIANS and they hope to still be on the warpath in the next millennium. LIAM FAY pow-wows with an authentic showband phenomenon.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  7 Oct 1996
Some Father s Son Joe Jackson
In the first part of an extensive two-part interview, writer and director Jim Sheridan explains how 90% of what he creates is rooted in the tension that existed between himself and his dad. By Joe Jackson.

Music | Interview 34% |  8 Feb 1995
I Was a Teenage DRUG DEALER. . . Stuart Clark
Yup, we thought you'd like our stab at a tabloid headline. Thing is, there was a time when Danny Boy O'Connor looked inexorably set on a course for the California State Penitentiary. Then he discovered the therapeutic qualities of the House Of Pain and apart from the odd skirmish with the 2FM Roadcaster, there's been no looking back since. Crime reporter: Stuart Clark.

Music | News 34% | 22 Jan 2007
Richard Galpin readies album no 3 The Hot Press Newsdesk
The man who owns what Hot Press has formerly delcared as "a voice that can do both style and substance" is to preview his third album with a series of gigs.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  2 Nov 2005
Gorgeous George Craig Fitzsimons
Bloodied but unbowed by press smears, Scottish socialist firebrand George Galloway is one of the most vocal anti-war politicians in Britian. In a characteristically frank interview he discusses Iraq, Abu Ghraib, Resepect, and why Shannon could be considered a terrorist target.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% | 14 Dec 1994
CHRISTMAS: A SURVIVORS GUIDE Olaf Tyaransen
Go on, admit it. You thought you knew it all about the most festive occasion. Wrong, suckers! OLAF TYARANSEN is the man with the definitive lowdown on the Christmas alphabet as he offers his essential guide to surviving the Santa season. Well, with a name like that he’s obviously more in tune with the North Pole, right?

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 20 Oct 1993
Saturday Night Live! Niall Stokes
When Pat Kenny steps before the cameras every Saturday, he attracts an audience-rating which is increasingly likely to threaten the long-standing supremacy of The Late Late Show in Irish broadcasting. But despite his popularity, the host of Kenny Live remains something of an enigma. In the first part of a wide-ranging interview he talks about everything from his first kiss to, well, the meaning of life. Interview: Niall Stokes

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 11 Mar 2008
The Fugitive Jason O'Toole
Ex-IRA man Gerry Kelly talks to Jason O'Toole about his run-ins with the British Army, his near death experiences, the part he played in inflicting civilian casualties and his time on hunger strike.

Music | Interview 34% | 23 Jan 2009
In Bob we trust Niall Stokes
To mark our coverage of the 50th anniversary of Island Records we revisit Niall Stokes’s classic 1978 conversation with Bob Marley...

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  5 Oct 1994
The Green House Effect Joe Jackson
As the first ever Green Party member in The Mansion House, Dublin’s current Lord Mayor, JOHN GORMLEY, is certainly unique. However, dismissed as a novelty by some and derided by others, the substance of his views as a politician have often been completely overlooked. Here, the capital’s number one citizen is unchained. Interview: JOE JACKSON. Pix: COLM HENRY.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  3 Apr 2007
Standing alone at the edge of darkness Jason O'Toole
Fr Shay Cullen, an Irish Columban Missionary priest, tells Jason O’Toole about falling in love, the battle against corruption in the Philipines, the scourge of western sex tourism – and why the Irish government isn’t doing enough to protect children from paedophiles.

Music | Interview 34% | 27 Feb 1986
OUTSIDE IT'S DONEGAL Bill Graham
In the magical, wind-swept landscape of Ireland's remote north-west the cameras roll as U2's Bono and Maire of Clannad make the video for their collaborative single "In A Lifetime". Bill Graham joins the entourage at work and at play and talks to the main protagonists.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 11 Aug 1993
THE ART OF THE MATTER Joe Jackson
In the first part of a two-part interview, Michael D. Higgins, Minister for Arts, Culture and the Gaeltacht, talks about his philosophy of art, about his own poetry and, more controversially, about RTE, the IRTC, the future of commercial radio - and the sustained and slanderous campaign against him in the Sunday Independent.

Music | Interview 34% |  7 Jul 2006
The life of Brian Tara Brady
He may not be your average indie kids dream ticket, but Brian Kennedy has lived in very interesting times. An initially promising career was scuppered by record company machinations, but, under the stewardship of Van Morrison, he matured into a remarkably successful solo artist, as well as a respected novelist. Then there were the small matters of performing at George Best's funeral, the recent Eurovision controversy - and his current run at the helm of RTE's flagship summer Saturday night entertainment show.

Politics | Frontlines 34% | 11 Mar 2002
No butts, it's Mr nice guy Joe Jackson
He may have an image as a political bruiser, but even if he is prepared to engage Bertie in a head-butting contest, Michael Noonan would rather win over the electorate by the more gentle art of persuasion. Joe Jackson meets the Fine Gael leader to discuss public issues and personal traumas, and discovers why he's partial to drink and Bill Clinton but opposed to Sinn Fein, the Bertie bowl and tax breaks for sports stars.

Music | News 34% | 19 Jan 2006
Ricky Warwick returns with new solo album The Hot Press Newsdesk
Former Almighty man Ricky Warwick returns to the fray with the release of his second solo album, Love Many Trust A Few, which features contributions from Joe Elliott, Emm Gryner, Simon Carmody and former Whitesnake man Vivian Campbell.

Hot Features | Interview 34% | 16 Dec 1996
So Then, Andy, Did You Ever Sleep With Gaybo? Joe Jackson
He may well be RTE s only living intellectual but ANDY O MAHONY, host of The Sunday Show, will long be remembered by many as the man who asked Deirdre Purcell if she ever did the bold thing with Gay Byrne. JOE JACKSON gets the self-styled closet determinist to come out of the closet. Pix: Colm Henry

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  2 Jul 1986
The Mary Harney Interview Michael O'Higgins
Mary Harney grew up on a farm in Co. Dublin, experiencing what she herself calls "a normal childhood". Having completed a convent education she studied at Trinity College, and became the first woman auditor of the prestigious Hist. Soc., where she mingled and met with many of the then present and future politicos of the era.

Music | Interview 34% | 21 Apr 2009
Arcadian Fire Stuart Clark
After years of pushing the self- destruct button, Pete Doherty has proved his detractors wrong with a solo album that's on a par with anything he did with the Libertines.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  4 Mar 1998
A WORKING MAN IN HIS PRIME Liam Fay
pat mcCABE is on a roll. Neil Jordan s film adaptation of his acclaimed novel The Butcher Boy has been rapturously received. His latest meisterwerk Breakfast On Pluto about a border county transvestite is about to be published. He s going on the road with Jack L. And what s more he was recently named Monaghan Man of the Year! Interview: liam fay. Pics: Mick Quinn

Music | Interview 34% | 17 Sep 1997
Homer s Odyssey Stuart Clark
Heard the one about the Irishman, the Bronx and the tab of industrial-strength acid? Stuart Clark hadn t either until that most eligible of bachelors, David Holmes, talked him through the mad month in New York that inspired his Let s Get Killed album.

Hot Features | Commentary 34% | 15 Dec 1993
HOW WAS IT FOR YOU? A Various
It may have been a perfect year for Dina Carroll but how did the assembled Hot Press writers find 1993? The next five pages tell the tale.

Music | Interview 34% |  1 Dec 1988
I STILL HAVEN'T FOUND WHAT I'M LOOKING FOR Liam Mackey
So this is Christmas and what have we done... As U2 prepare to enter the final yearof the decade, Bono devotes a long night at his home in Dublin to reflecting on his life, his music and U2's extraordinary career to date. Interview: Liam Mackey

Music | Interview 34% | 18 Jun 1987
ROCKIN' ALL OVER THE STATES Liam Mackey
As "With Or Without You" hits No. 1 in the US singles charts, Liam Mackey joins U2 on their biggest - and most successful - American tour to date.

Hot Features | Interview 34% |  8 Mar 1995
How to Talk Dirty and Influence Poeple Joe Jackson
Love, sex, filth, money, sex, abortion, politics, sex, family, marriage, sex – and the whole damn thing. The BRENDAN O’CARROLL interview by JOE JACKSON. Pix: Michael Quinn.

Music | Interview 34% | 25 Sep 2002
The gospel according to Mark Peter Murphy
JJ 72 have been hailed by some critics as the finest thing to come out of Ireland since U2 - and no wonder. With a hugely impressive debut album under their collective belt, the expectations are even higher for the follow-up, I To Sky. They share with their illustrious predecessors a predilection for intense songs of spiritual yearning - and a desire to make music that truly stands the test of time. But is it rock'n'roll?

Music | Interview 34% | 29 Sep 1999
Voyage Of The Damned Stuart Clark
Or should that be The Clash? Well no, actually, cos there's no Clash, Damned or Pistols in 1999. But there s still joe strummer, who was there when Shane got his ear bitten off and, 22 years later is back for his own second bite with THE MESCALEROS. I ve seen everything that it s possible to see go down and I ve survived it, he tells STUART CLARK who finds himself shanghaied on a ferry to Stranraer. Main pix: MICHAEL QUINN.

Politics | Frontlines 34% |  8 Feb 1995
RISE AND FOLLOW CHARLIE Liam Fay
The task facing SEÁN HAUGHEY is a daunting one: to attempt to emulate the achievements of his father, a man who spent decades at the very centre of Irish public life. Liam Fay talks to the most famous moustache in politics about life, love and the pursuit of happiness, and asks: is Dáil Éireann to be the House of the Rising Son? Pix: COLM HENRY.

Politics | Hog 34% | 14 Dec 1994
WHAT, ANOTHER YEAR? Dermot Stokes
And so, unbelievably another year has bitten the dust. Here, continuing a tradition as Christmassy as the eating of turkey and the consumption of way too much alcohol, The Hog reflects on a turbulent year, when we all grew older and much, much wiser.

Music | News 34% | 17 Apr 2003
Get them while they're hot The Hot Press Newsdesk
Witnness tickets are selling three times faster than last year, shifting 10,000 in the first hour

Music | Interview 34% | 31 Mar 2009
Stones on a roll Andy Darlington
Andy Darlington travels to Manchester to meet the Stone Roses, an outfit who’ve progressed past the point of being just a band to become something altogether bigger...

  33% |  9 Mar 2006
Steafan Hanvey & The Honeymoon Junkies Member CD Offer
 

Politics | Frontlines 33% | 27 Jul 2005
Why London is being bombed David Morrison
David Morrison presents the evidence.

Music | News 33% |  3 Jun 2008
HMV survey shows Ireland's favourite classical music The Hot Press Newsdesk
A new survey carried out by HMV has revealed which classical composers are favoured by fans in the UK and Ireland.

Music Review | Single 33% | 13 Sep 2002
More iconic than ironic Hannah Hamilton
 

Music | News 33% | 30 Apr 2009
Eagles bass player takes Irish citizenship The Hot Press Newsdesk
Eagles’ bass player Timothy B. Schmit has become an Irish citizen at the ripe young age of 62, Hot Press has learned.

Music | News 33% |  9 Aug 2005
Iain Archer pulls out of Glen Hansard gig The Hot Press Newsdesk
Bad news for Iain Archer fans in the North: he’s backed out of playing with Frames frontman Glen Hansard at the Lisburn Island Arts Centre.

Music | News 33% |  9 Jan 2004
Van's the man for the programme The Hot Press Newsdesk
Van Morrison gets the, if you will, rockumentary treatment on January 21 courtesy of that other Belfast boy and former Hot Press scribe Stuart Bailie.

  33% |  6 Nov 2002
The Very Best of Euphoria Member CD Offer
 

Music | News 33% | 12 Jan 2007
Save the Belfast Festival! The Hot Press Newsdesk
Queen's University is launching a campaign to ensure the future of the Belfast Festival, which is threatened by a lack of funding.

Music | News 33% | 17 Jul 2009
Richard Hawley confirms Northern Ireland visit The Hot Press Newsdesk
The gig is part of the Belfast Festival At Queen's.

Music | News 33% |  2 Feb 2005
Vis-onic multimedia festival for Northern Ireland The Hot Press Newsdesk
Next month sees the first Vis-onic festival bring a plethora of multimedia events to Belfast, Coleraine and Derry

  33% | 11 Mar 2005
Ride On:
(47/100 The People's Choice)
The 100 Greatest Irish Albums
 

Music | News 33% | 27 Feb 2006
The Evangelists return: hide your parents The Hot Press Newsdesk
The Evangelists are back to spread their word on the music scene after adding a new member to their choir of rock zealots.

Music | News 33% | 13 Jun 2003
Think you've got what it takes to cut it on the airwaves? The Hot Press Newsdesk
BBC NI's Donna Legge Show are on the prowl for contributors

Music | News 32% | 16 Mar 2009
BBC2 show Ulster Hall gig highlights The Hot Press Newsdesk
Snow Patrol, Ash and Therapy? are all featured.

Music | News 32% | 23 Jul 2002
Derry Glory The Hot Press Newsdesk
Fresh from their previous sell outs at Belfast and (with a little help from about 7000 friends) at Witnness Oasis just keep rolling.

Music | News 32% |  9 Jul 2003
A new space cadet The Hot Press Newsdesk
Ex-Engine Alley drummer Emmalione Duffy-Fallon returns with New York-based punk-pop trio Skyrocket

Film Review | Film 32% | 13 Sep 2001
The Most Fertile Man In Ireland Craig Fitzsimons
As intriguing as Most Fertile Man probably sounds, the film ranks alongside the most excruciatingly embarrassing I have witnessed in my entire life

Music | News 32% | 19 May 2005
Across The Line to stage secret gigs The Hot Press Newsdesk
If it isn't enough that Belfast's premier music show has returned to television, ATL is hosting two exclusive live gigs

Politics | McCann 32% | 15 Dec 1993
EAMONN McCANN’S CHRISTMAS HAMPER! Eamonn McCann
In this year’s special Xmas gift-pack L Interdenominational Sex L L Festival Fun L L Plus The Virgin Birth and all that baloney L

Politics | Message 32% | 24 Aug 1994
The conflict in the North Niall Stokes
THE conflict in the North has nothing to do with religion. That is the startling argument put forward by Peter Robinson in an interview in this issue of Hot Press.

  32% | 23 Nov 2009
Hotpress Political Archive  
Right from its inception, Hotpress insisted that while music was the ever-present soundtrack to our lives, it made no sense to divorce it from the wider world in which it was created.

Politics | McCann 32% | 15 Dec 1993
PEACE WILL COME . . . NOT Eamonn McCann
As 1993 draws to a close, considerable optimism is being expressed about the possibility of bringing peace to Northern Ireland. But no process or initiative grounded in Catholic Nationalism can bring about enduring peace, says Eamonn McCann.

Music | News 32% |  3 Jun 2008
Mozart voted Ireland’s favourite composer The Hot Press Newsdesk
A new classical music survey has confirmed Mozart as the nation’s most popular composer.

Music | News 31% |  2 Apr 2002
Oh yeah! The Hot Press Newsdesk
Ash confirmed to play the 2002 Hot Press Irish Music Awards - and you may be lucky enough to see them do it. Watch this space

Music | News 31% | 30 Jul 2008
Oh Yeah music centre announces trade show lineup The Hot Press Newsdesk
Ahead of this Friday's Music Mart industry trade fair in Belfast, organisers have announced an initial list of exhibitors.

Hot Features | Reports 31% |  5 Feb 2008
The market keeps on growing Stephen Errity
An investigation of the latest trends in drug use reveals that the prevalence of cocaine continues to increase.

Music | News 31% | 11 Jan 1995
Let the IMRO flow Colm O Hare
The Irish Music Rights Organisation has embarked on a nationwide recruitment campaign. Report: COLM O’HARE.

Music | News 31% |  3 Sep 2002
Picture this... The Hot Press Newsdesk
Andrea Corr as the "local girl" who falls for a fiddle player from Liverpool? Yep, when she reignites her acting career to star in romantic musical-comedy the Great Ceili War

Politics | McCann 31% |  7 Dec 2000
The WC Is Not Out Of Order Eamonn McCann
A contentious political issue may yet unite traditions and borders

Music Review | Album 31% | 26 Oct 2006
Magnetic North Patrick Gleeson
Magnetic North is Iain Archer's best work to date.

Music | News 31% | 15 Jul 2002
Definitely, not maybe The Hot Press Newsdesk
Confirmed: Oasis to play Derry's Prehen Playing Fields in September

Music Review | Album 31% |  6 Feb 2006
Love Many, Trust Few Colm O Hare
Ex-Almighty man and sometime Dublin resident (he now spends most of his time in LA) Warwick has an impressive pedigree. Apart from his time with the Scottish punk-metallers, he’s played with New Model Army and even guested with his earliest inspiration, Stiff Little Fingers.

  31% |  6 Mar 2004
Beautiful Night Deat  
Alanis Morissette, Bob Geldof, The Chieftains, Dolores O'Riordan, The Divine Comedy, Katie Melua, Kila and Maire Brennan are among the first batch of acts to be confirmed for Beautiful Night, a free cross-border musical spectacular taking place on Saturday May 1.

Politics | McCann 31% | 15 Dec 2000
Losing Their Marbles Eamonn McCann
Police forces are dangerously out of touch with the public they serve

Music Review | Album 31% | 24 Jun 2003
How To Hang Off A Rope Tanya Sweeney
It’s early days for the band, and although right now, it seems unlikely that they’re going to topple any Premier League outfits, the world is still very much their oyster and I’d venture that they’ll swallow it whole at some point.

Music | News 31% | 24 Apr 2008
President Clinton salutes Terri Hooley The Hot Press Newsdesk
Bill Clinton has written to the organisers of the Good Vibrations Records anniversary concert to commend the label, along with boss Terri Hooley, for their support

Music | News 31% |  8 Apr 2004
Tennent's digital T festival to bring top acts to Belfast The Hot Press Newsdesk
Faithless and Talvin Singh are among the international artists confirmed for Belfast's Tennent's digital T festival

Music Review | Album 31% |  5 Jul 2001
Apache Tribe Stephen Robinson
The plaudits that the first volume in the series received from such luminaries as Steve Lemaq and DJ Magazine are legion, and happily this volume is more of the same.

Industry | Reports 31% | 23 Nov 2002
Irish Trade Board abandons music biz Stuart Clark
There was a time when the Irish Trade Board saw potential for growth in the music industry here. But not any more.

Politics | Message 31% | 23 Jul 1997
NO TURNING BACK Niall Stokes
WHERE S the emotion? Where s the elation? Where s the celebration? It s an odd sensation indeed. There s a feeling that the words of acclamation should come pouring out but they don t. They don t and they won t.

Music | News 31% |  6 Mar 2004
Beautiful Night Details emerging The Hot Press Newsdesk
Alanis Morissette [right], Bob Geldof, The Chieftains, Dolores O'Riordan, The Divine Comedy, Katie Melua, Kila and Maire Brennan are among the first batch of acts to be confirmed for Beautiful Night, a free cross-border musical spectacular taking place on Saturday May 1.

Music | News 31% |  2 Nov 2009
Jeff Wayne’s Musical Version of The War of The Worlds – Alive on Stage! returns The Hot Press Newsdesk
The highly anticipated new production will be invading Dublin and Belfast in November 2010

Music | News 31% | 21 Apr 2004
Across The Line TV spin-off to premiere next week The Hot Press Newsdesk
April 26 sees radio duo Donna Legge and David O’Reilly enter the realm of the audio-visual in Across The Line TV, with Snow Patrol playing a starring role in the warm-up special

Politics | McCann 31% | 27 May 1998
JOHN, I'M ONLY COUNTING . . . Eamonn McCann
Monica McWilliams of the Women's Coalition says that Northern Irish society is "immature" and that this can be put down to the domination of politics and public life by people of the male persuasion. Something to that effect. I'm told John Hume is livid.

Music | News 31% | 24 Apr 2008
Three priests sign music contract The Hot Press Newsdesk
Northern Irish priests sign £1m contract with Sony BMG

Music | News 31% | 19 Jun 2007
Martha Wainwright headlines Lisburn festival The Hot Press Newsdesk
Martha Wainwright is one of the acts announced to play this year’s Music Revolution in Lisburn in August.

Music | News 30% | 14 Apr 2003
Walsh confirms split with Keating The Hot Press Newsdesk
During his career to date, the name Ronan Keating had been inseparable from that of his manager, Louis Walsh. Until now, that is…

Music | News 30% | 15 Sep 2008
Christy Moore and Declan Sinnott plan Christmas tour The Hot Press Newsdesk
Christy Moore and Declan Sinnott have lined-up a December/January run of dates in Dublin's Vicar Street.

Politics | Message 30% | 14 Apr 1999
The Beast Within Niall Stokes
LOOK now at what is happening in the Balkans and weep.

Hot Features | Reports 30% | 12 Nov 2007
Stage: The neglected art form Joe Jackson
Consequences is a new dance production by the Echo Echo Dance Theatre Company.

Music | News 30% | 25 Apr 2005
Free party for Belfast with BBC Radio Ulster The Hot Press Newsdesk
The Thrills, Therapy, The Revs and The Undertones are among the bands performing for the BBC Radio Ulster celebrations

Music | News 30% | 22 Mar 2002
AND THE NOMINATIONS ARE… The Hot Press Newsdesk
 

Music | News 30% | 28 Nov 2006
Snow Patrol reveal onstage guests for upcoming tour The Hot Press Newsdesk
Gary Lightbody has revealed the cast of musicians that are joining Snow Patrol on their upcoming tour.

Music | News 30% | 13 May 2003
JJ72 appoint new bassist The Hot Press Newsdesk
And (shock horror) it's former Valves woman, Sarah Fox. The hotpress.com Psychic Dept. confirm February's speculations... Pic: Roger Woolman

Music | News 30% | 22 Jun 2005
Lisburn to host Music Revolution festival The Hot Press Newsdesk
Iain Archer, Republic of Loose and Alabama 3 are among the artists performing in Lisburn this August

Music Review | Album 30% | 11 Jan 1995
Ready For the Storm Siobhan Long
DÉANTA: “Ready For the Storm” (Green Linnet)

Hot Features | Comedy 30% | 18 Aug 1999
Sunny Jimoin Nick Kelly
Comedian Jimeoin, a star in his adopted homeland of Australia, is set to return to the Irish stage. Report: Nick Kelly.

  30% |  6 Feb 2003
Sunday Times issues formal apology to Jim Aiken  
The libel suit taken against the Sunday Times by concert promoter Jim Aiken is conclusively settled in Aiken's favour

Politics | Message 30% |  7 Sep 1994
I know that in certain areas Niall Stokes
I know that in certain areas of Belfast and of Derry there was jubilation when the IRA finally announced a complete cessation of violence last week.

Music | News 30% |  7 Nov 2006
BellX1 lead Belfast Festival line up The Hot Press Newsdesk
All roads lead to Belfast this month as the city hosts belFEST 2006, a veritable orgy of live music that runs from November 16 to December 3.

Music | News 30% | 19 Apr 2002
Ireland's best party shapes up The Hot Press Newsdesk
The Frames and David Kitt are the latest additions to the Hot Press Irish Music Awards bill. And with TV3 as well as BBC NI broadcasting it & a potential audience of 20 million, it's a good job we've no less than ex-Live Aid director David Croft at the helm

Music | News 30% |  8 Mar 2006
46% increase in readership for Hot Press The Hot Press Newsdesk
Hot Press is among the big winners in the latest JNRS results, with an increase of over 46% in readers over the past twelve months. This is the fifth six-month period running that Hot Press has increased its reach.

Politics | McCann 30% |  4 Aug 1999
Writing Wronged Eamonn McCann
EAMONN McCANN pays tribute to controversial playwright JIM ALLEN.

Hot Features | Comedy 30% | 20 Jan 2000
Northern Delights Nick Kelly
Nick Kelly meets the Hole In The Wall Gang, whose brand of political satire has won them friends on both sides of the sectarian divide

Politics | Message 30% | 13 May 1998
THE PEOPLE HAVE SPOKEN Niall Stokes
The war is over. There are many messages that can be read into the overwhelming endorsement of the Good Friday Agreement on both sides of the Irish border - but that is the most conclusive, and the most welcome.

Music | News 30% |  5 Oct 2009
NEWSTALK TAKES STATION OF THE YEAR The Hot Press Newsdesk
Newstalk has reclaimed the Station of the Year Award, at the PPI Radio Awards, the results of which were announced on Friday night.

Music | News 29% | 17 Jun 2009
Glasgowbury add BBC stage The Hot Press Newsdesk
Already a fixture at several major international festivals, 'BBC Introducing' will take charge of Glasgowbury's Small But Massive stage.

Music | Hit the North 29% | 19 Jul 2001
Ulster Says Geronimo Colin Carberry
Colin Carberry meets Chris Murray of Apache Tribe

Hot Features | Reports 29% | 26 Aug 2008
Best doze of their lives Lauren Murphy
In a previous life, he fronted winsome Northern Ireland popsters Catchers. Now, after a hiatus that included working in a bookshop, Dale Grundle is back with a folk-tinged new project, The Sleeping Years

Music | News 29% | 15 Jan 2009
HMV confirm Zavvi Deal The Hot Press Newsdesk
HMV has confirmed the purchase of five Zavvi outlets in Ireland to Hot Press. The acquisition is part of a deal that sees HMV purchase 14 Zavvi retail outlets in all and, as already revealed by Hot Press, will save over a hundred jobs.

Music | News 29% | 26 Apr 2001
Arts Of The Matter Stuart Clark
WILT, MY VITRIOL and moonlighting Snow Patrol man Gary Lightbody join forces on May 4th for a show at the University of Ulster.

Music | News 29% | 26 Apr 2001
Arts Of The Matter Stuart Clark
WILT, MY VITRIOL and moonlighting Snow Patrol man Gary Lightbody join forces on May 4th for a show at the University of Ulster.

Hot Features | Laugh Lines 29% | 16 Apr 2004
Beyond the back of beyond John Henderson
John Henderson on how Irish comedians are taking it to the boonies

  29% | 12 Feb 2007
Vroom with a view  
Small Engine Repair may be Niall Heery’s first feature film, but having picked up an award for best first feature at Galway last year and several other shiny trinkets, it’s one of the most keenly anticipated Irish titles in years.

Hot Features | Reports 29% | 20 Jun 2007
The Junior Minister has his say about gays Jason O'Toole
Ian Paisley Jnr.’s observations about gays in a recent Hot Press interview have drawn accusations of bigotry.

  29% | 19 Nov 2004
The Undertones
(5/100 Greatest Irish Albums)
The 100 Greatest Irish Albums
Dismissed in some misguided quarters as “merely” a bunch of singles with some other stuff to help make up the numbers, The Undertones debut album now sounds as it did back then, like a unique collection of rampant and furious stabs of instant, sunny, funny, glorious pop.

Music Review | Album 29% |  8 Jul 2002
The Elm Wood Adrienne Murphy
Like many artists with a humorous take on life, Murphy also has a deep compassion for lonely souls and sad situations

Music Review | Album 29% | 16 Apr 2009
And So I Watch You From Afar Lauren Murphy
Invigorating debut from northern Noiseniks.

Politics | Message 29% | 30 Apr 1997
Tony Blair: soon to be settling in comfortably at 10 Downing Street Niall Stokes
AT long last, it seems that the wretched grip in which the Tories have held British society is about to be undone. For 18 years they have ruled. And for 18 years the poor, the underprivileged and the unemployed in Britain have suffered as a direct consequence. During that period, the Tory party have waged a relentless campaign against the underclass. In a time of plenty, poverty has intensified, and with it the sense of hopelessness and despair which takes root among the disadvantaged on the margins of an affluent society.

Music Review | Album 29% | 24 May 2001
Synergia 2 Breaks, Beats And Blips From Independent Dublin Stephen Robinson
Like Synergia 1, a bit of a mixed bag this, but worth investigating