Please tell me you are having a laugh:)
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I wasn't arsed at the time about the whole media circus that was Dianas passing and I can imagine Townsend and others in our team saw grief, real and media-stoked, in their own families and friends and thought it might be a nice gesture on behalf of us Irish to show a little empathy and solidarity with the British people.
But If this is decending into a "who deserves a black armband tribute" debate ...well I'd have the means nothing to me celebrity dressed up as culture self obsessed little rich girl over the dangerous little, tax dodging, zealot, psycho-witch who should've been locked up long before she died in the best hospital money could buy any day.
But that's the great thing about being Irish. There's so little we agree upon.:)
Anyone that could sleep with big ears has to be some woman:D anyway the reality is that her wedding and funeral were huge interest stories in this country, the contrasting views on this thread are the reason that now you will regualry have a minutes applause instead of silence to remember people.
While it didnt bother me oneway of the other, I would only get hot and bothered if we were to be respecting a murderer, all she did was marry into royalty, have the life of reilly, did a bit of charity work and died tragically at a young age leaving behind two kids. Nothing that would cause offence in that to most people.
The Lady Di thing was Soap not politics, the stuff of dreams.
The Di royal wedding happened at the time during the peak of the H block hunger strikes.
I remember Nell McCafferty taking about how in the republican heartland of the Bogside, women would gather round to watch the live coverage of the wedding.
All quite normal apparantly.
It was big time soap, bigger than the Dallas, more popular than the episode of who shot JR.
BTW, the Irish team in 1997 had about 7 or 8 Irish born in it.
Why didn't Roy Keane tell Andy to fark off?
It was said that they all lived and worked in England.
The 4 Icelanders who lived and worked in England didn't feel a need to wear the black armband.
The episode is best consigned to near the top of the list of those embarrassing FAI cóck ups.
its not so much that she was English royalty, good and all as they have been to us Irish throughout the years. :o
Its more that she really was a nobody who married a somebody, she was of limited intelligence and couldnt keep her legs closed. She did a bit of charity work and apparently wore nice dresses but apart from that i cant see what the fuss was about...
ridiculous that someone like that gets the black armband treatment from the FAI.
I remember the day.
I heard she died on the radio....and the dashboard and the steering wheel.
People mouthing about the Brits over-reaction to Di's death would want to make sure they're not on quote in the Katy French thread with embarrassing comments of their own by the way
why dont you go check, Mr. Keeper of the Morals.
;) added just in case...
In fairness to Greenforever the prevailing wisdom at the time was that this was an event of huge importance. The fact that the Irish team wearing black armbands didnt provoke much comment in the Irish media gives you an idea of the mood of the time. Its easy in hindsight to look back and laugh at all the fuss but they were queing up at the British embassy to offer their condolonces at the time. I remember being shouted down at the time by my mates for pointing out that she hadnt acheived anything in life.
I remember the game well and I don't even recall any talk about the arm band. In fact I didn't even notice them wearing it :o. So if it didn't cause even the remotest ripples then, not sure why it should now.
Reminder: Different rules in CA forum so behave.
I don't like royalty but have no problem wearing black arm bands as mark of respect when Head of state in the UK dies. Diana on the other hand so far down the pecking order would mean for consistency we would have to do it for everyone.
I was only nine at the time so don't recall the media feeling. One point I would suggest for "no fuss" in the media is that broadsheets would hardly go mad about those things. Then you have the tabloids, effectively British papers, so they would not dare sitr up any nationalist sentiment on the incident.
no it wasnt in many of the commentry pieces in any of the sundays or the indo and times. or much about it in the herald. it wasnt some mass conspiracy of silence people just genuinely thought Dianas death was a really tragic occurence and that there was nothing unusual about the irish team marking the event. you didnt have people ringing into marion finucane(this was pre joe duffy) to complain about it cause they were all ringing in to say how sad her death was.
because it was a huge embaressment:rolleyes:
the fact that she wasnt much anyway and she was British doesnt make sense why the Irish team wore black armbands.
No fuss - well i think by that time a lot of people had giving up on the team, i know i had anyway,
and i didnt notice it at the time too