vektarman wrote: » All together now..... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mlXwumQxrRw
Posy wrote: » I never knew Brendan Grace sang this until it was mentioned on the news last week after his death. As an regular reader of this thread and forum, fan of Reeling in the Years and someone who knows the advert and jingle well I can't believe that fact had alluded me all these years.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » For bonus points - which current Councillor and former TD also appears in the Safe Cross Code advert?
Hangdogroad wrote: » Does anyone else think a lot of recent PSA's, at least the Irish ones are starting to lose their edge and become more and more like regular adverts, almost to the point where the message is being lost? The awful anti smoking ones with people singing I Will Survive make me switch off, a recent road safety one that comes across like a coffee advert (about driving late at night on the motorway). The Gas Network one with Daniel O Donnell about registered gas installers is another one, I presume its aimed mainly at the elderly but I think the whole message is kind of overshadowed by the jokey tone. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3FmwMTuyszk
An Riabhach wrote: » PSAs are definitely not what they used to be, and I think that's largely down to the PC brigade and all the snowflakes and bleeding hearts who were "offended" by the more hard hitting ones. Just one other example is fire safety ads. Back in the 80s we had the spine-tingling but brilliant ads "GET OUT.GET THE FIRE BRIGADE OUT.AND STAY OUT". But now,we have the tame, ineffective "Together,we can stop fire" campaign which reminds me more of a game you'd play in primary school.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Is this advert and the one about the toddler killed by the drunk driver not hard hitting enough for you?https://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/ten-complaints-received-over-crashed-lives-tv-advert-rsa-says-1.3755313 The more hard-hitting the ads are,the more attention people will pay to them,and they will take them a lot more seriously. That's the point I'm trying to make. Maybe the reason for the absence of spine-tingling ads about fires is that there really isn't an education issue about 'getting out' that needs to be addressed now?
Hangdogroad wrote: » Don't know if this was already posted here but this is pretty much a want list of mostly missing classic Irish PSA's from the late 70's/early 80's. The author is listing them from memory so made a couple of mistakes. No 6 "put it this way" was actually a British pif. I've a funny feeling No 5. EDITH might have been UK too? Out of the others I can remember all of them and since this was written in 2007 only number 3 on the list "John did ya put the cat out?" has surfaced online.http://crookedtimber.org/2007/01/25/toward-a-catalog-of-irish-public-service-ads/?fbclid=IwAR2GAxAFdPw5gJHY1dElyAgwkxoUu51gOy7Sh5TkdBEjRFKrQX_l94Cim5w
An Riabhach wrote: » Numbers 9 and 10 are definitely elusive,to the point where we'll never see them again. I really wish RTE had kept these. Another one which I have mentioned many times is one where two farmers are having a heated argument in a field about moving cattle and the spread of TB.
Sardonicat wrote: » "Ah, mind yer own business! " "T'is my business! TB spreadin to my land IS my business!" That one?
An Riabhach wrote: » Yessss!!!! "Arragh I don't give a damn......" "Beware the farmer who doesn't give a damn.Know him for what he is!!"
Hangdogroad wrote: » Was that the one where at the end they angrily turn away from each other and then there's a freeze frame?
Hangdogroad wrote: » Don't know if this was already posted here but this is pretty much a want list of mostly missing classic Irish PSA's from the late 70's/early 80's. The author is listing them from memory so made a couple of mistakes. No 6 "put it this way" was actually a British pif. I've a funny feeling No 5. EDITH might have been UK too? Out of the others I can remember all of them and since this was written in 2007 only number 3 on the list "John did ya put the cat out?" has surfaced online. The Safe Cross Code one mentioned here is a different one to the more famous version which is online.http://crookedtimber.org/2007/01/25/toward-a-catalog-of-irish-public-service-ads/?fbclid=IwAR2GAxAFdPw5gJHY1dElyAgwkxoUu51gOy7Sh5TkdBEjRFKrQX_l94Cim5w
Hangdogroad wrote: » By the way no 12. Fit enough to catch that bus. Was that the same one that had Don Cockburn, or some another well known newsreader cycling a bike and featured the track Oxygene by Jean Michelle Jarre?
Hangdogroad wrote: » http://crookedtimber.org/2007/01/25/toward-a-catalog-of-irish-public-service-ads/?fbclid=IwAR2GAxAFdPw5gJHY1dElyAgwkxoUu51gOy7Sh5TkdBEjRFKrQX_l94Cim5w
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » 4. Pretty sure EDITH was Irish. 7. Think it was putting bullets into a revolver and spinning it, Russian Roulette-style. 9. The mammy figure said "I.S. 148. Sounds like a robot, doesn't it?" This was the Irish standard for fireproof nighties, apparently. Think she was the wife in "John, did you put the cat out?" (Cat was the only thing not on fire in that ad! :pac: ) 11. He was called Micheal Angelo. (As in Micheal Martin, no fada soz) Dang, one of the commenters beat me to it 12. "'Noel Carroll can run 800 meters in …' some time or other." Yeah but he's long dead now and I stand a very good chance of outliving him, even though I'm a lazy git Anyone remember the one with the big black Merc (probably Charlie Haughey :pac: ) trying to turn right off the Long Mile Road while in the straight ahead lane? "Now he's banjaxed... TWO lanes of traffic." Or the one about seat belts - you had to have them, but they were still an optional extra?!? so the ad was about not cheaping out on them. Cue fat guy in a Fiat 131 Mirafiori strugging to put on an old style non-reel belt which wouldn't go near him. Inertia reel belts that actually allowed you to move, reach the radio (if you had one!) etc were dearer. Of course lots of people still didn't wear them at all so you can see why they wouldn't spend the extra few quid. "Tyres. FIVE of the best friends you'll ever have" (just after some git in a Vauxhall, I think, has carelessly driven over a half-brick and a broken bottle). Remember asking my dad why they said (and emphasised) the word five. The guy saying in the comments that these are lost due to expense of video tape is wrong, these were all made on film (had lots of visible scratches etc. too.) IFI digitally released recently loads of prints they got from advertising agencies and restored, doesn't seem to include any PSAs though but there has to be prints of these around somewhere.
Sardonicat wrote: » The little girl in 9 was called Eimear and she had the same nightie as me ! Always felt sorry for her the way her mother ripped through her hair with the hairbrush. Also, Eimear never said anything word.
Hangdogroad wrote: » The mother in it terrified me. There was this air of menace to everything she said and did, even at the end when she turned to the camera with this weird smile and said "kids, wouldn't ya die if anything happened to them?"
An Riabhach wrote: » I've just remembered another line from that ad: "I don't want reactors." ðŸ‘ðŸ‘
An Riabhach wrote: » 10 out of 10 for anyone who remembers this. An ad warning kids not to accept lifts from strangers, but this particular ad had puppets in it something like Punch and Judy????
Hangdogroad wrote: » Doesn't ring a bell. Was it Irish or British?
An Riabhach wrote: » I really can't remember........ We were able to get UTV and BBC back then as well as RTÉ because we had another old aerial which we found dumped in a field (reception wasn't great though),so it could've been from either channel.
Sardonicat wrote: » Early childhood spent in England and was here from 9 up and I have absolutely zero recollection of that. I remember the English PSB ads very well (had an irrational fear of fridges from the one that ended with the kid trapped in the dumped fridge) . I remember the Charlie Says never talk to strangers cartoon but nothing featuring a Punch and Judy show. Now, a film was shown to us at school in England warning us not to talk to or go away with strangers which didn't pull any punches, followed by a talk from a PC which actually saved me from being coaxed into a car a few weeks later and for which I shall be eternally grateful, but that film didn't feature a Punch and Judy show. Could it have been something played to you in school? Although I don't recall anything of that nature being discussed in school here in the early 80s.
An Riabhach wrote: » The only parts I remember are a puppet in the shape of a car with scary sharp teeth arriving and saying to one of the puppets "Would you like to get in my car?Your mother and father sent me" and then the puppet flies into a panic and starts beating him with something and shouts "You naughty naughty man,I don't believe you! Take that! And that! And that!" Ye must think I'm going mad........