Subscriber OnlyNo news is bad news: Morning Ireland proves daunting but necessaryRadio: Radio 1 flagship dutifully covers the RTÉ crisis as Colm Ó Mongáin and Oliver Callan give cause for optimismBy Mick Heaney●Fri May 10 2024 - 05:00
MusicEurovision 2024: Israel singer Eden Golan makes final after public voteThousands of protesters including environmentalist Greta Thunberg take to Malmo streets over Israel’s war in GazaThu May 9 2024 - 23:08
Subscriber OnlyThe Horse by Willy Vlautin: tuned to the broken-down key of lifeWashed-up musician is forced to make a move when a horse mysteriously appears outside his shack
MusicEurovision 2024: Israel singer Eden Golan makes final after public voteThousands of protesters including environmentalist Greta Thunberg take to Malmo streets over Israel’s war in Gaza
MusicBruce Springsteen concert in Belfast: Tell us your verdictWe would like to hear about your experience of seeing The Boss perform on his Irish tour
Should you have children? These five philosophical questions can help you decideUnthinkable: Procreating to ‘save the West’ is probably a bad idea, but what’s a good reason to have children?By Joe Humphreys
Eurovision 2024: Israel singer Eden Golan makes final after public voteThousands of protesters including environmentalist Greta Thunberg take to Malmo streets over Israel’s war in Gaza
Bruce Springsteen concert in Belfast: Tell us your verdictWe would like to hear about your experience of seeing The Boss perform on his Irish tour
Bruce Springsteen’s first Irish gig of 2024: The Boss kicks off in Belfast with No Surrender, then builds a momentous setIt’s Springsteen’s first show in the North since 2013. He doesn’t say much until the band gets revving, an hour into the evening. But the songs say plentyBy Stuart Bailie
Villagers: That Golden Time review – Conor O’Brien delivers his most striking album yet By Tony Clayton-Lea
Beth Gibbons: Lives Outgrown – A powerful, wise and deeply loving piece of work By Siobhán Kane
Mitski at 3Arena review: a remarkable opening kick-starts a breathtaking night of melody and melodramaFrom the start Japanese-American pop star Mitski pulls the crowd into a spooky pop neverlandBy Ed Power
‘We hadn’t heard from Mammy. Where was she? Then all hell broke loose’: The Dublin and Monaghan bombings 50 years onMay-17-74: Anatomy of a Massacre, a new documentary, chronicles the atrocities attributed to the Glenanne gang and hears from victims and their familiesBy Noel Baker
Alice Rohrwacher: ‘I want my films to feel like Pasolini’s, like they are parables’Josh O’Connor stars in the director’s new feature as an archaeologist who falls in with a band of tomb-raiding thievesBy Tara Brady
Made in England: The Films of Powell and Pressburger review – Martin Scorsese front and centre in a wonderful chronicle of influential duo By Tara Brady
Big Banana Feet: ‘Lost’ film of Billy Connolly’s 1973 tour of Ireland is a fine tribute to the fearless comedian By Tara Brady
Much Ado about Dying: A vital film about an extraordinary, infuriating human being By Donald Clarke
The Horse by Willy Vlautin: tuned to the broken-down key of lifeWashed-up musician is forced to make a move when a horse mysteriously appears outside his shackBy NJ McGarrigle
UCD Festival’s literary highlightsBooks newsletter: a preview of Saturday’s pages and a wrap of the latest newsBy Martin Doyle
No news is bad news: Morning Ireland proves daunting but necessaryRadio: Radio 1 flagship dutifully covers the RTÉ crisis as Colm Ó Mongáin and Oliver Callan give cause for optimismBy Mick Heaney
Bodkin review: toe-curling paddywhackery from Barack and Michelle Obama plumbs the diddly dee depthsNetflix dramedy thinks it is critiquing cliches about Ireland when in fact it is adding to the stockpileBy Ed Power
Patrick Freyne: On Selling the OC, Alex has the recipe for a good relationship. It’s a nice, alliterative list – all the C-wordsThe Netflix reality show involves glamorous ladies and hunky gentlemen quaffing champagne and talking about their problems at lengthBy Patrick Freyne
Doireann Garrihy to leave RTÉ 2FM breakfast show after five yearsPresenter leaving morning radio show to concentrate on podcasts, travel, and pursue other projectsBy Fiachra Gallagher
Jilly Morgan’s Birthday Party review: Subversive chill brings unsettling edge to what seems to be a play about loveTheatre: Liam McCarthy’s decades-spanning new play portrays what might or might not have happened at a house party in Limerick in 1983By Mary Coll
Tom Moran Is a Big Fat Filthy Disgusting Liar review: Vulnerable exploration of a journey from self-hatred to self-fulfilmentTheatre: More than any other factor, the catharsis he is seeking onstage is an attempt to process trauma that he feels stems from an insecure attachment at homeBy Tom Lordan
Alan Phelan and Mark Swords: The List and the Line review - A riveting dialogue between past and contemporary aesthetic attitudesThe artists’ work, with its overt sensuousness and colourful bombast, is perfect for show at Casino MarinoBy Tom Lordan
Visual art reviews: Each Now, Is the time, the Space; and Aleana Egan: Second-hand Group shows can create brilliant conversations, but unless you are familiar with the work of these artists, you may need help to get inBy Gemma Tipton