5euro for 6 carrotts .them days are long gone . Unfortunately
@markc32583 күн бұрын
This Dublin no longer exists The politicians globalists ruined this .. Leo the Indian was the start of the rot Mehole aided him ..
@speakertreatz26 күн бұрын
some form of Star Wars must have been showing in The Ambassador for the entire 80s
@techshebeenАй бұрын
What a wonderful video, thank you. The accents are wonderful to hear again. Eamonn Mac Thomáis had a lovely way with people.
@raymondmurphy9593Ай бұрын
Eamonn MacThomais brilliant tour the history of the port and docks of Dublin .
@JohnMannion-m9yАй бұрын
Brilliant.Eamonm McThomais was a superb presenter.
@johnmc38622 ай бұрын
Moo-er street.
@Tombola912 ай бұрын
Gone forever😢 handed over to people who despise us
@joseparcenary47062 ай бұрын
7:29 Hard to read, but RETURN OF THE JEDI is playing at the Ambassador. (best guess is this was recorded August 1983 - as indicated by "The Dresser" poster) and I can confirm it aired on RTE 23/11/1983.
@philipmcdonagh10942 ай бұрын
You can say mapping has also changed since this was made 41 years ago.
@philipmcdonagh10942 ай бұрын
Six years to start the build, wow they sure got things done back then, takes about 4 times longer today. Loving these videos thanks.
@philipmcdonagh10942 ай бұрын
Oh one more thing you weren't mugged by seagulls every day.
@philipmcdonagh10942 ай бұрын
We all looked so much fitter and healthier back then considering we were broke. If a person let kids do what they did back today they'd be arrested, yet its perfectly okay today to stuff you kids full of crap and let them lie around all day like beached whales. Yea we've certainly come a long way since then, unfortunately the wrong way.
@philipmcdonagh10942 ай бұрын
Poorer but better times God even the seagulls had manners back then.
@philipmcdonagh10942 ай бұрын
Very early 80's only one civic building up.
@nigefal3 ай бұрын
Luke Kelly @2:33?
@annkavanagh81103 ай бұрын
Aww my granny kavanagh and also my god mother ❤
@annkavanagh81103 ай бұрын
I sold in Moore Street and you also new my granny kavanagh
@derrick96353 ай бұрын
Fantastic. You couldn't pay me to walk dublin these days .
@KT-tp7dk3 ай бұрын
That's so nice to see. Thank you.
@JohnJohn-mo8rt3 ай бұрын
☘️☘️☘️👍
@67lionsoflisbon373 ай бұрын
There are those who tell us that we need more diversity. That today is better than then. Utter nonsense. Moore Street in full flow was better than anything a leftie politician or planner could conjure. The 1st timei walked through it as a kid, I turned around and walked up and down several more times. Absolutely magical. The sights ,sounds, and smells. The real honest to God Dubs. Loved it. And I'm a culchie.
@Hyena-g2z3 ай бұрын
A great story teller
@margaretdownie44073 ай бұрын
Nothing like well fired rolls, bloody love them 😊💜
@keithcoleman41374 ай бұрын
Good old dublin is gone,the council have knocked buoldings which should have been kept .its lost its character,peolle might not have had much but they where happy .moore st is full of Foreigner's, phone shops ,barbers .its a shame dublin city council never helped the traders or keep moore st preserved
@SaoirsenahÉireann14 ай бұрын
And all gone now, and not a shadow of it's former self...
@norwegianzound4 ай бұрын
I work in the fancy very buildings down in the the Docklands. The locals have been left behind again. The young men from this area are threatening and dangerous. Since covid, they seem to think it is legal to skirt around on scooters wearing balaclavas. To hell with the nostalgia. Move them out.
@norwegianzound4 ай бұрын
"Containers may be progress. But certainly not for workers". A very ignorant man.
@jmss76132 ай бұрын
Explain what’s ignorant about that comment?
@LyndaMartin-v8b5 ай бұрын
😂Memories bring tears to a grown MaNs eye😪💙My TowN💯DuB💙🌟
@joc10165 ай бұрын
Before the brown people invasion
@phili7995 ай бұрын
Sadly its not Ireland anymore folks, its an EU island off the continent, we gave it away ! We'd no idea what we were in for.
@daisydaisy...45622 ай бұрын
Shut your yak... It's as good as you make it and a lot better than other places I've been....
@Breas-md6hc6 ай бұрын
Now destroyed by mass immigration done by Irish traitor politicians
@FrankNolan-sx2hz6 ай бұрын
It wasn't perfect but it was ours, we all had a great sense of belonging in Moore st back then, sadly that sense of belonging is no more, and in the very near future it will be like that throughout the city of Dublin and eventually Ireland, absolutely heartbreaking.
@consigne48916 ай бұрын
Ah yes ! Love it
@martinmcdonald42077 ай бұрын
Born in Holles Street Hospital myself back in 1962 , a teenager when this film was made, these old films are a pleasure to watch. National treasures.
@brocksamson42458 ай бұрын
He'd be rolling in his grave the state of it now, an absolute crime Dublin city Council haven't done a tap to keep it alive or any kind've incentive to help trader families keep it alive
8 ай бұрын
Loved Saturdays going in to town with me ma as a child,if you were good and lucky ,you got fruit in a brown paper bag for the bus home ❤
@Modj-j5m9 ай бұрын
I remember those heavy brogue shoes in school 🚸 1980s.
@murrayeldred356310 ай бұрын
Delightful programme. Delightful people. Times now gone.
@EireFirst2510 ай бұрын
I'd 2 aunts that were street dealers, proper salt. 💚
@irishphotoexplorer680311 ай бұрын
I hope he enjoyed a ice cold pint or two and his ham sandwiches or as we call them.... Hang sandwiches... A legend.
@shanebradley528411 ай бұрын
If eamon was alive today he would be in shock at what the so called Irish government have done to our country. Moore Street full of roma Albanian gangs on Henry Street. Talbot Street full of Africans and other non nationals. Our country is destroyed 😢
@audreyperrin32011 ай бұрын
My aunt lived near stonebatter
@patkearney932011 ай бұрын
I remember my Gran an old dub bring me to moor street and a kind soul with big blue lips would kiss me and I loved her I seen nothing strange in this beautiful old Dublin legend. We have loosed much and gained little in kindness.
@gudlisner50111 ай бұрын
Moving Jarvis St Hospital out to Beaumont took so much out of the local economy.
@speakertreatz26 күн бұрын
the locals can thank CJ Haughey for that
@chrismckee556911 ай бұрын
Loved the Gate. Two rows of seats for 1 shilling each so fabulous plays and acting available to everyone. RIP Micheàl and Hilton.
@michaelkilcourse1517 Жыл бұрын
Full of foreign phone shops, oh how far we have fallen, Michael Collins would turn in his grave
@BrianGarrigan Жыл бұрын
Irish Lives Matter
@FinbarrAnderson Жыл бұрын
Good man Thomas god be with you and your lovely son you both gave us so much.❤
@eringobreathtiocfaidharla1446 Жыл бұрын
He'd die if he was to see Moore st now , Romanian central and black phone shops , what happened to my lovely little country(
@speakertreatz Жыл бұрын
your lovely little Irish developers had a plan to flatten everything behind the Carlton, anything that wasn't a protected structure. All those shops were offered to rent cheaply with short leases of 18 months, the expected time left before they were demolished. Lovely little Irish business people avoided these unfair terms so they were available to the Nigerian community, who took them. And when the plan for Dublin Central ran out of money the project was halted and the leases kept rolling. The lovely little developers had no respect for your romantic view of Dublin, they were planning on ripping down everything they could between O'Connell St and Moore St. So you can complain to them, not the foreign business people they were happy to exploit.
@eringobreathtiocfaidharla1446 Жыл бұрын
@@speakertreatz foreign business people my boloks ,there all over the country left rite and centre,it's nothing to do with short term leases your away with the birds
@speakertreatz Жыл бұрын
Were you living in Dublin from 1998 - 2003?@@eringobreathtiocfaidharla1446
@dannyd967 ай бұрын
@@speakertreatzA combination of global capital, cheap money, housing bubbles, and the mass migration of cheap labour and you get the soul, sense of community, and pride of place ripped from Dublin, and places like it, as people become commodified along with everything else around them. Mere cogs in the brutal, fast-paced, and oppressive capitalist machine.