Marjorie Brennan
@marjbrennan.bsky.social
1K followers 470 following 240 posts
Arts and culture writer. Former parliamentary reporter and recovering sub-editor. Books Are My Business @ Irish Examiner. Déiseach in Cork 💙❤️
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
marjbrennan.bsky.social
Maybe someone will pay attention now a Cork person is saying it 😂
marjbrennan.bsky.social
I was sent this pic by Denis Murphy of Bantry Library, with a selection of books inspired by the desert island picks in the weekly Books are my Business feature I do in the
@irishexaminer This has made my day, week, month, year! Cherish your libraries and librarians ❤️
Reposted by Marjorie Brennan
sketchesbyboze.bsky.social
If you're using AI to write essays, eulogies, a text to your wife, I do think less of you as a person. Ceding your mental and creative abilities to a machine is an embarrassing thing and people should be ashamed to admit doing it in public.
[quoting a tweet by fractalcounty that reads, “today I learned that there are actual people irl who get genuinely upset if they catch you using chatgpt. like they view it as a serious moral failing in certain circles”]
marjbrennan.bsky.social
Saw one on a lane near Fountainstown beach in Cork a few weeks ago and wondered if anyone called them hairy mollies any more! Moved it out of the way so a car wouldn’t run over it.
Reposted by Marjorie Brennan
mikemoynihanex.bsky.social
As they say on LinkedIn, delighted to share news of my new book about the future of the GAA - more details to follow but feel free to circulate this message.
More Than A Game: The GAA and Where It's Going is published soon by Gill Books
Reposted by Marjorie Brennan
barnabyedwards.bsky.social
An alert to all creatives using #WeTransfer. Basically, stop immediately! As of August, they will begin scraping everything you send for AI purposes (see the new paragraph in their Terms and Conditions below).

If, like me, you’re a voice artist, they’ll clone your voice. Avoid at all costs.
Reposted by Marjorie Brennan
thebookshopie.bsky.social
4 forthcoming Irish Sport themed titles - all from the new Gill Books catalogue - Including titles from Brendan Fanning on the evolution of Irish Rugby, Marc Ó Sé on Kerry GAA, @mikemoynihanex.bsky.social on the future of the GAA, and David Gillick on athletics and after. #preorders #irishsport
In a county where success is weighed in medals, the Ó Sé brothers all hung up their boots with heavy hearts but even heavier pockets: a combined total of 16 All-Irelands, 28 Munsters and 12 All-Stars
making their way back to An Ghaeltacht – a haul which is unlikely to be surpassed by a set of siblings any time soon. Marc Ó Sé is the youngest member of the most famous footballing family in Ireland – the Ó Sé family. As such his football path was clear and his mission was understood. Not only did Marc have his brothers to emulate; in Kerry the voices from the past can often speak loudest. How loud is that volume when your own uncle is the inimitable Páidí Ó Sé? 
More than just a revealing account of Marc’s own glittering career, Ó Sé is laden with the tales and anecdotes, and the successes and failures that have marked the storied history of this footballing dynasty. The GAA is more than a game. It’s a cornerstone of Irish identity — woven into parishes, families, and the national psyche. But behind the passion and pride lies a question that has never really been
asked. Where is the GAA going? In this revealing and timely book, acclaimed journalist Michael Moynihan explores how the GAA is changing, and what it means for the Ireland it serves. Is it still a grassroots, amateur participation movement? Is it a delivery system for elite sport? Is it a real estate organisation with thousands of premises? With sharp insight and deep research, Moynihan tackles
the big questions — from unregulated payments to stadium sponsorships, broadcasting
controversies, and postponed games for pop concerts. Moynihan lifts the lid on the inner workings of the GAA at a crossroads. At once thoughtful, balanced, and bold, Moynihan shows us the organisation behind the headlines — and why its future matters to us all. Ireland went to the 2023 Rugby World Cup as the number one ranked team in the world. They had a unique Test series win in New Zealand on their list of achievements; they were the reigning Grand Slam holders; and still they came home early. Getting to the last four has become an obsession. But is this the only measure of success?
This ambition is a country mile removed from the awfulness of Irish rugby as the game went from amateur to professional during the nineties. We were all over the shop, and the men behind the counter were lost and disgruntled. But by the arrival of the Six Nations in 2000, pain gave way to change. There were real signs of growth. From Eddie O’Sullivan, who kicked it off and then was deported to a limbo where he couldn’t get a decent job, to men of massive influence like Joe Schmidt and Stuart Lancaster, to David Nucifora – the first tsar of Irish rugby in the pro era – rugby here became unrecognisable from its old days. The Race offers an exhilarating, behind-the-scenes look at the cut-throat world of elite athletics.
With vivid recall, David Gillick, one of Ireland’s most celebrated 400m sprinters, describes the sacrifices, triumphs and devastating setbacks that define a life spent chasing greatness. From the punishing grind of training camps to the mental anguish of injuries and the darker side of athletics, this memoir captures the intensity of a career defined by fractions of a second. 
As an Irish athlete competing against the odds, Gillick recalls the unique challenges of representing a small nation: limited resources, enormous expectations, and the constant push to prove you belong among the world’s best. But The Race is more than a story of sport. It’s an exploration of human resilience and the fight to find balance in a life consumed by the pursuit of perfection. It’s about enduring heartbreak, overcoming burnout, and discovering who you are when the race is over.
Reposted by Marjorie Brennan
mrchrisaddison.bsky.social
Ireland, that most literary of countries with the most poetic version of the English language, choosing to ignore all its homegrown brilliance & slop up workaday words-by-numbers as its own face. Choosing to promote itself in a way that undermines one of the very things the world loves about it.
Reposted by Marjorie Brennan
corkcyclingcrew.bsky.social
Today we’re rolling into the Marina for #BikeWeek2025! 🚲✨

Ever wondered about cargo bikes? Come take one for a spin or flaunt your own.
Family? Friends? Pets? Bring them all!

No booking needed — just show up. Fun activities for kids too!
Reposted by Marjorie Brennan
readywriting.bsky.social
JFC. This is depressing. I feel like “kids these days” are looking at us like we’re Don Quixote tilting at windmills when we rage against this rampant use of AI and just refusing to evolve. But even us slacker Gen-Xers never imagined this level of disregard for learning and education and *work*
ktaylor.bsky.social
This was a depressing semester for me dealing with inappropriate AI use by students (including graduating seniors). Then, a colleague sent me this and I was like, that doesn’t help.

#EduSky #AcademicChatter #Academia

archive.ph/2025.05.07-2...
archive.ph
marjbrennan.bsky.social
Literally and figuratively.
marjbrennan.bsky.social
❤️ What a fabulous picture X
marjbrennan.bsky.social
We’ve crossed the rubicon in that regard and many others, unfortunately. I think this kind of stuff is hardwired into people’s brains now.
marjbrennan.bsky.social
Is it worth a trip to the Pale?
marjbrennan.bsky.social
Yes, I was confused as to why they have no footpath, a pedestrian marking actually painted on the road yet cars are allowed drive up there. Crazy stuff.
marjbrennan.bsky.social
Am I missing something here? Where are they meant to walk?
marjbrennan.bsky.social
Go bhfóire Dia orainn 🙄