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Some Irish Satire News Stories

  • 18-11-2008 1:23am
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 2


    Here is one of a few Irish Satire News doing the rounds on email this week, you can enjoy perhaps:)

    Source

    http://www.satireandcomment.com/1108ireland.html
    Crisis in the Emerald Isle

    For immediate release: Shamrock Shock

    (ACPA-Galway) Ireland woke in shock today to learn that the Emerald Isle no longer has 40 shades of green. The devastating news, announced by national radio broadcaster RTE, shakes a nation already struggling to cope with its first recession in 15 years. The discovery came on the heels of a national shade-count, initiated after hundreds of complaints from tourists and locals.


    "Ah like, you know, somethin just didn' look right" said Joe Bannon, a dairy farmer in Tipperary and one of those whose complaint with the National Department of Shamrock Affairs led to the survey. "Every time I looked across the fields they just started to all look the same" said Bannon.
    "Oh he's absolutely right", agreed Mary Heaney a school teacher in a Cavan County Elementary school, "even the kids in my nature class could see that the greens were all starting to blend together".


    Speaking on the popular "Morning Ireland" radio show, RTE's environmental correspondent Paul Cunningham told a despondent nation that the number of shades had dropped to 37 and "will no doubt decrease further before stabilizing in the low thirties or high twenties". A scared and dazed people were left asking "how did it all go so wrong so fast?".


    The Tourism sector was hit immediately with cancellations from all over the world but particularly from high spending Americans who come for special coach tours designed to showcase each of the 40 shades. "37 shades is just not the same", said one man from Boston. But Colleen Hanrahan, a third generation Irish American from the Bronx, said she still planned to visit but expects "a large discount to make up for the missing shades".


    The Irish Government announced the creation of a scientific task force composed of recently laid-off engineers to look into the issue. "Its like having a pothole in the road, once you look into it, it gets better" said one official optimistically.



    The Government also announced that despite the calamity, none of the public servants from the Shamrock Department will be laid off. "We never lay off public servants" a spokesman reassured RTE.


    Dubliners already struggling to cope with the stench of a large rotting tiger seemed to take the latest setback in their stride. One Northsider, wearing a recently resurrected track suit - the national costume of recessions past - eloquently noted, "Ah shur Jaysus I don't care as long as my tracksuit is shiny, it's only the culchies who go on about that 40 shades bollocks".

    END


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