Bananas on the Breadboard

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  • Опубликовано: 26 май 2013
  • 'Bananas on the Breadboard' is a 52 minute documentary celebrating life and traditions in the markets area of Dublin's North West Inner City. Through a series of interviews with local people and location and archive film, the documentary tells stories from the fruit and vegetable market, the former fish market and Smithfield. It also tells the story of street trading synonymous with this part of the city which many local families, particularly women, have been involved in for generations. As well as the many interviews with local people the film features the last interview with Tony Gregory who was a passionate defender of the women's right to trade in their own city. There is also a contribution from Johnny Giles who spent his early years kicking ball in Ormond Square while his mother was out street trading.
    Director: Joe Lee
    Writer: Joe Lee
    Camera: Michael Doyle, Daniel St Ledger
    Producers: Fidelma Bonas, Danny Pender and Joe Lee
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Комментарии • 83

  • @kelloscully9632
    @kelloscully9632 3 года назад +25

    R.I.P Tony Gregory .... One of the best politicians Ireland ever had. Honest man who stood up for the honest working folk. Great upload.

    • @davidr5964
      @davidr5964 3 года назад +5

      A man that should have a statue, 100ft high, in the middle of Sean McDermott street. He, and Christy Burke, did more for the North inner city than any other person. R.I.P. Tony. Your memory lives on.

    • @mairedaly4926
      @mairedaly4926 3 года назад +1

      Honest & Savvy.... a deadly & wonderful combination

    • @doragibbons2977
      @doragibbons2977 3 года назад +2

      Threw away the mould when they made tony Gregory he was salt of the earth next be replaced sadly R I p tony you were the best went to young 🙏🙏

  • @waynefarrellvoiceovers
    @waynefarrellvoiceovers 7 месяцев назад +3

    Tony Gregory: the template for a people's politician. This is a brilliant documentary, and beautifully narrated by Karen Dowling. Thank you.

  • @teresarenee3829
    @teresarenee3829 3 года назад +8

    I think it's in the Irish DNA to make the best of everything and be thankful for what you have....it's how we survive this kind of life....I know I have strong Irish blood in my veins...

  • @mariaefelices6543
    @mariaefelices6543 Год назад +4

    I saw poverty in dublin in 1971 ,I was there for the wales. V ireland rugby ,I stayed in LUCAN just outside dublin , hotel nice people lovely .went to dublin ,crossing the river liffy I as a 15yr old boy could not comprehend mothers babes in arms with a brood around her sincerely begging for money to feed her children ,I was with my dad and a large group of cardiff dockers who all gave to many on the liffy bridge and they were very grateful ,I had 4.50p I gave two fifty half my pocket money it upset me and stuck in my mind all these years ,we also walked the back streets as we were early for match kick off , they were bad hovels ,boarding no glass no nothing ,I sign off now im getting up tight feeling ty gnt mark called cardiff xxxxx

  • @geraldwalsh6489
    @geraldwalsh6489 Год назад +5

    Its a crime that the old Corpo Fruit market is now used as a storehouse by builders. I remember coming 100 miles journey up from Carrick on Suir with me Dad to see Mr.McNulty and Mr.Rogers' fruit stall. Priceless memories. The fruit market should be done up and used as an exhition centre

  • @josephinekennedy5855
    @josephinekennedy5855 2 года назад +5

    They were strong women that worked in Dublin City got some vegetables and and fruit that myself it was a grand plac.💕

  • @debbiefox4439
    @debbiefox4439 3 года назад +8

    Loved watching this Tony Gregory a true legend and Christy burke our history its wonderful to see all the.salt of the earth true blue dubs brings back memories

  • @patrickjm3487
    @patrickjm3487 3 года назад +4

    Tony Gregory loved and helped out a lot of the Dublin people who were all good people in the day!!
    Love the Dublin street scene))
    All hard working people god bless them

  • @susandhifaoui
    @susandhifaoui 11 лет назад +14

    wow, this was really enjoyable. ty for the upload. it is always a pity when traditions fall to the wayside and big development comes in. The past must be preserved. thank you for sharing.

  • @noelowens9976
    @noelowens9976 3 года назад +2

    Lovely docamenty my aunt Mary Owens rip 🙏🙏🙏 and Tony Gregory and a lot of other past and present in the Docamenty 🙏🙏🙏

    • @padraigowens
      @padraigowens 3 года назад

      Rip Mary owens 🙏 also Tony Gregory done so much for the people of Dublin a true Dublin legend 🙏

  • @avigyavegashunyata1108
    @avigyavegashunyata1108 3 года назад +8

    i am from india and living in ireland from past 20 years. so greatful to watch the history about ireland. and to be honest old ireland looks so much like india the entire vibe of community spirit, though its sad to see that american culture is now taking over. we have same economic issues, we still do people are struggling hard just to keep roof over their heads and have food for the kids. police in india are horrible except will take bribe of 10 euros and let you sell your stuff.

  • @user-tm2vc6fj8q
    @user-tm2vc6fj8q 2 месяца назад +1

    Fantastic 😊

  • @murrayeldred3563
    @murrayeldred3563 2 месяца назад

    Gregory- one of the Good/Great guys.

  • @RaulMeatFactory1975
    @RaulMeatFactory1975 5 лет назад +8

    My Mum used to bring me up Moore Street in the early 80's to buy bangers n' rockets just before Halloween. Great Buzz

  • @padraigowens
    @padraigowens 3 года назад +5

    Rip Tony Gregory a true gentleman done a lot for the people of Dublin. 🙏🙏🙏❤️

  • @MaryHarry-hh4pq
    @MaryHarry-hh4pq 3 месяца назад +1

    Real good man

  • @johnlennon6491
    @johnlennon6491 2 года назад +3

    very nice video and people its just so different from most Irish rural and small town experience. Its like a different type of Irish and I don't mean that in a derogatory way they're just like chalk and cheese dubs and culchies

  • @peterclare9297
    @peterclare9297 9 лет назад +6

    enjoyed this very much

  • @stephenrafter1980
    @stephenrafter1980 3 месяца назад +1

    I wish the pound note was back. The Punt.

  • @neilcarrollMeganJamieForever
    @neilcarrollMeganJamieForever 5 лет назад +10

    Tony Gregory RIP

    • @zozimus43
      @zozimus43 5 лет назад +3

      I remember him well from when I worked in the North Inner City in the 80s. Great man who always put the citizen first.

  • @bohsgerry
    @bohsgerry 3 года назад +7

    the iveagh market what a disgrace at present

  • @chrisbardin1886
    @chrisbardin1886 3 года назад +3

    proud to be a dub

  • @eileencorcoran3057
    @eileencorcoran3057 2 года назад

    Very interesting.... x

  • @vinniesmagnetfishingandmet7445
    @vinniesmagnetfishingandmet7445 3 года назад +3

    Bring back Moore's street i miss it so much

    • @pillardelaney4726
      @pillardelaney4726 3 года назад +2

      I used to shop in Moore's Street, years ago.
      Then we muve to Sydney, Australia, Still remember the shops and peopple.
      Last time in Dublin, Roches Stores was closing down for good.
      Dublin is not my Dublin like it was.

  • @christinadoyle1134
    @christinadoyle1134 6 месяцев назад +1

    Tony Gregory died the bonns where grainne worked very grumpy person wasent the person inner city saw in him but he had cancer 😢

  • @patrickmoore3717
    @patrickmoore3717 3 года назад +6

    That's what they were training them clowns down in templemore for to stop women providing for their families

  • @dubinatub1
    @dubinatub1 5 лет назад +2

    miss those simple days.moor street gone for good

    • @zozimus43
      @zozimus43 5 лет назад

      Everything is changing all the time, and always was. That's the way of things - best to embrace the present and the future and not hearken to some mythical past.

  • @deeppurple883
    @deeppurple883 Год назад

    I was born in Lurgan St. All my family are from around here. I could write a book or ten. It was tough back then 60,70,80s, poverty unemployment big families. Good time's bad time's you just rolled with the knocks. Went to George's Hill and Brunner same as John, I also hated it. I worked in the Market and I worked in the clothing trade as a Top and underpresser. The contras then to now is like landing on the moon, the change. Dublin was falling down then. Progress without the heart and soul to go with it. We are the last of the school of hard knocks. Moore St is gone, maybe five stalls left. Shop's along the street are Polish and African. It's heart breaking walking through it today. Most of the people interviewed in this film are dead now. The legent Tony Gregory also gone. One major opstical to integration, Apartments are not people friendly. No matter what way they build them, they don't bring people together they are not family friendly . You can't make a community in apartment complexs. They are not configured to bring people together. I've even noticed that the people who bought up most of the old Artisan house's around the city haven't gelled like they taught they would. This is because they weren't born and bread in the house's like the people before them. They had no history and no foundation. Now they are isolated because everyone feels the same and no one's trying. I can see and feel it when I walk around them, it's like a ghost town north and south of the liffey where these are . Pity 🇮🇪

    • @robertharrison7654
      @robertharrison7654 Год назад

      Did you ever know Mary or pader Mcglockin from chancery. St.

    • @388Caroline
      @388Caroline 9 месяцев назад

      No Moore street??

  • @marypoppins8083
    @marypoppins8083 6 лет назад +9

    the Dublin accent sounds a lot like the scouse accent thanks for sharing this enjoyed watching.

    • @johnmorrison1448
      @johnmorrison1448 5 лет назад

      +Shelly seymore you've gotta be joking if you can't hear scouse in Dublin or Dublin in scouse, you lying☺

    • @neilcarrollMeganJamieForever
      @neilcarrollMeganJamieForever 5 лет назад

      Don't be fucking insulting me. My Dublin accent sounds nothing like that shite!!

    • @bernicewade9796
      @bernicewade9796 3 года назад +4

      You're right..
      A lot of Dubs moved to Liverpool in the 40's, 50's & 60's and they blended in effortlessly.
      Even you're dish Scouse contains the same ingredients as Irish Stew.
      My grandmother came from Cheshire and we've got family living in Liverpool. I can totally get the Dublin/Liverpool accents. We've even got similar sense of humours.

    • @connieh6136
      @connieh6136 3 года назад +4

      @@neilcarrollMeganJamieForever Do you have to be so ignorant,perhaps look up your history! There was a huge imagination of Dubliners that worked and settled in that part of England ! 🤡

    • @aprc1977a
      @aprc1977a 3 года назад +3

      that is correct. No doubt because of the hundreds of years of people emigrating to Britain landed in the port of Liverpool. A journey made by millions with a huge percentage settling in Liverpool and Manchester to find work throughout the industrial revolution. Affectionately known as the 33rd county. The strong links can be found in the countless scousers with Irish surnames and very similar accents. The same can be said for Belfast and Glasgow

  • @desmondpaulflanagan3565
    @desmondpaulflanagan3565 3 года назад

    Ah Mrs Owens is a lovely lady...

  • @zozimus43
    @zozimus43 5 лет назад +5

    It's great to see the continuous improvement in Dublin. I remember the derelict buildings, the terrible poverty and squalor of the 70s and 80s and the place has transformed. It's a vibrant and thriving city now. I've no patience with those who try to run down the systems that have brought us here and away from those dark days. If you don't like it - do something about it, get involved in politics. If you are just going to whinge though... spare us.

    • @Hibernia63
      @Hibernia63 3 года назад +2

      Seems like you are the only one whinging

    • @SunshineSuperstar
      @SunshineSuperstar 2 года назад +1

      Don't knock the whingers. They can be very correct and very necessary!

  • @MrPaulie17
    @MrPaulie17 5 лет назад +4

    Different Class of people up the dubs

    • @zozimus43
      @zozimus43 5 лет назад +1

      Sure. But don't leave anything unlocked.

    • @bernicewade9796
      @bernicewade9796 3 года назад +1

      @@zozimus43
      Coz those culchies would rob your eyeball then come back for the eyelashes

    • @connieh6136
      @connieh6136 3 года назад

      Sad world when there are ignorant people like you in the world, Mr First CLASS 🤣

    • @MrPaulie17
      @MrPaulie17 3 года назад +1

      @@connieh6136 listen if your reply is to me when I say different class I mean top class any dub know that so get back in your box and shut up you fool

  • @MaryHarry-hh4pq
    @MaryHarry-hh4pq 3 месяца назад

    State fgael ordered this

  • @gerardodonnell4652
    @gerardodonnell4652 2 года назад +2

    All the owld characters have gone, god help us they were a gas crowd.

  • @grannykelly5799
    @grannykelly5799 Год назад

    Your are lucky Giles,

  • @MaryHarry-hh4pq
    @MaryHarry-hh4pq 3 месяца назад

    Loves Dublin back then robbing apples and fruit smacks y aunt as she knew here ut never voilence as boy mitching s school 😊

  • @Traincal007
    @Traincal007 4 месяца назад

    The gardi were such a bunch of cowards.

  • @clouddweller1195
    @clouddweller1195 7 лет назад +17

    Irish men and women.Eire for the Irish.

    • @cahillgreg
      @cahillgreg 6 лет назад +2

      Shush now

    • @neilcarrollMeganJamieForever
      @neilcarrollMeganJamieForever 5 лет назад +1

      Why should he/she shush now. Freedom of speech!!

    • @zozimus43
      @zozimus43 5 лет назад +3

      Who are the Irish? Normans? Vikings? Spanish? Should all the Irish who made their lives abroad come home now? Your kind of racist nonsense would be the ruin of us. Ireland is better than it has ever been. Good riddance to the poverty and ignorance of the past decades. I grew up here and my ancestors for generations are from here, and I say WELCOME.

    • @petermurphy9968
      @petermurphy9968 2 года назад

      If you look at the surnames of these "Irish " street sellers, you'd find the majority of them names mentioned are of foreign extraction who are of either immigrant/invader extraction. Names like Proudfoot, Burke, Gregory, Buckley, Giles, Bodie, Owens, Jennings, Myles, Hayden, you're ignorance is astounding. And I can assure you, not one of these "Irish" have a word of Gaelic on their lips. in fact you'd get dagger looks from them if you spoke Irish to them. Dublin Jackeens selling dodgy fish and veg.

  • @stephenfreshbananas2457
    @stephenfreshbananas2457 5 лет назад +1

    Moore Street is.. to say the least.. slightly bunched lol

  • @mtek334
    @mtek334 2 года назад +3

    Moore Street now rings with the sound of "cigarettes/tobacco". These women who sold poor quality fruit and vegetables to those who would not know any different now used the same pitches to flog illegally obtained tobacco products - usually bought in from their second homes in the canaries etc. Moore street is not a cultural thing - it should be closed down once and for all the genuine fruit/flower pitches at other parts of the city better regulated. Ditto Henry Street at Christmas with its dangerous toys and fake perfume. Please do not glamourise what is going on at the moment - its criminal - nothing less.

  • @stanochocki8984
    @stanochocki8984 6 лет назад +8

    So what do the build in replacement; Architectural CRAP!!

    • @tar0286
      @tar0286 5 лет назад +4

      Yeah the new architecture in Dublin is quite depressing

  • @delboytrotter8806
    @delboytrotter8806 5 лет назад +11

    Stand byfor more refugees ..........
    Muslims, by EU order.....

    • @sands7779
      @sands7779 Год назад

      Travel and broaden your mind. The Irish have benefited and continue to benefit from billions of euro in funds from the EU and many Irish have migrated to countries across the world for better lives.

  • @petermurphy9968
    @petermurphy9968 2 года назад +3

    If you look at the surnames of these "Irish " street sellers, you'd find the majority of them names mentioned are of foreign extraction who are of either immigrant/invader extraction. Names like Proudfoot, Burke, Gregory, Buckley, Giles, Bodie, Owens, Jennings, Myles, Hayden, . And I can assure you, not one of these "Irish" have a word of Gaelic on their lips. in fact you'd get dagger looks from them if you spoke Irish to them. Dublin Jackeens selling dodgy fish and veg.

    • @jdtjames3
      @jdtjames3 2 года назад

      you clown

    • @sands7779
      @sands7779 Год назад

      Small minded, bigoted comment- you need to get out more.

    • @murrayeldred3563
      @murrayeldred3563 2 месяца назад

      The man making the comment above is a CLunt.