There’s a scattered applause as you connect your laptop to the PA, open Spotify, and start the playlist you’ve been working on all afternoon. I hope you’re all as excited about this new adventure as I am. I’m gonna spin a few tunes up here for a bit and say hello to each of you. The ripple of recognition moving through the place. Slowly turn the volume down so people don’t even notice it’s happening. Chin your hello to him and walk to the stage, slip into the DJ booth by the PA. Duggan is behind the bar with a notebook, taking stock. Someone’s inside the photo booth, polishing the seat. Guys dressed like Oliver Twist painting a mural of Bosco and The Morbegs in the corner where the board games are kept. Tattooed girls at the bar stuffing empty wine bottles with candles. Several projectors are in place, ’70s exploitation movies patterning up the walls. Lads with hipster beards are attaching an old bike high over the bar. Tell them to be good and cut through the road between stalled traffic, feeling eyes widen as they watch from their cars. Pause for a second to let a gaggle of girls take a selfie with you. Tonight’s about making an appearance, meet and greet the staff, take a few pictures for their socials, your socials. You want people to know this is happening. Posters for your residency on the windows-solo acoustic shows starting tomorrow night. Now you’ve swooped in with the money to relaunch the place. Flanagan’s was a legendary spot before the recession. There’s a front-facing window with a small bar, already serving takeaway pints. The venue officially launches next week, but you want to build the buzz already, so you’ve the doors wide open, allowing the music to pour out, giving people a glimpse behind the curtain into a magic you’re bringing to Kinlough. You catch the noise from Flanagan’s before you cross the road-music throbbing under the sound of drills, nails being hammered. Haven’t been able to do any workouts with this elbow on you, but when you glance at a group of young wans you catch their eyes running over your chest, your tatts. But you’ll be able to play guitar again by tomorrow, if you keep it rested. Elbow was still tender as you cut off the cast in the kitchen, the skin around it a bruised corsage. Tonight’s your first night without your arm in the sling. Is that Joe Brennan? Phones rise to take photos, and you pretend not to notice, gliding above the world, in the Other Place. Feel their energy, the rush of recognition. Faces turn to you like flowers seeking the sun. The contours of the Square shape themselves towards you. They wanna dance, they wanna sweat, they wanna fuck. Hogan’s Square is pure buzz as you walk towards Flanagan’s. His writing has been published in The Stinging Fly, The Irish Times, and broadcast on RTÉ Radio 1 and BBC Radio 4. In 2019 he was named Hennessy New Irish Writer of the Year. Walsh's short stories have won several awards, including the RTÉ Francis MacManus Short Story Prize and the Hennessy Literary Award. Victoria’s Secret undies “aren’t the problem-they’re merely a symptom of it.The following is from Colin Walsh's debut novel Kala. Fashion and celebrity magazines and pop music are packed with pouting, sexualized tweens and teens. Prada recently had a campaign that featured 13-year-old model Ondria Hardin suggestively caressing herself, while Lacoste paraded a braless 15-year-old Lindsey Wixson on a runway wearing a see-through shirt. The sexualization of minors is a widespread phenomenon involving dozens of fashion and media companies. That Puritan mind-set, however, reduces girls to their bodies more than any lingerie line could.īesides, why pick on Victoria’s Secret alone? asked Amy Odell in. But in the classic “Girls in Peril” narrative of social conservatives, self-respect is only compatible with “sexual purity.” No good girl ever thinks about sex. Teens need this time to experiment, make mistakes, and “figure out who they are before adulthood complicates things.” Believe it or not, said Jenna Sauers in, a teenage girl can be a good student and wear a thong at the same time. If they’re not “doing it” by then, they’re definitely thinking about doing it. The average American loses their virginity at 17, and by the age of 19 almost 70 percent are sexually active. By age 15, girls growing up in our modern culture are hardly interested in the “Hello Kitty” undies that their protective parents might prefer them to wear. Time for a reality check, said Amanda Marcotte in.
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