The Dubliner (magazine)
The Dubliner was a city magazine based in and centred on Dublin, Ireland. It ceased publication in January 2012, eleven years to the day after the first edition in January 2001.
The Dubliner was originally published by Dubliner Media Limited, and came out ten times per year. Contents included human-interest stories, reporting, opinion, political and social commentary, and essays on Irish culture. It also included reviews of restaurants, books, music, comedy, theatre, cinema and art.
The magazine was bought by the VIP Magazine Group in December 2008. In March 2010, it was transformed into a weekly magazine distributed with the Thursday edition of the Evening Herald.[1]
Regular features
"Capital Life" was a guide to Dublin music, theatre, food, drink, film, art, and comedy that appeared each week.
Contributors included Victoria Smurfit, Bono, Maia Dunphy, A. C. Grayling, Abie Philbin Bowman, Brendan O'Connor, Rosanna Davison, Shane MacGowan, Gavin Friday. Jean Butler, Quentin Fottrell, Domini Kemp, Paul Howard, John Stephenson, John Ryan, Gerry Stembridge, Irvine Welsh, John Banville, and Pauline McLynn.
Dubliner of the Year Award
The 'Dubliner of the Year Award' was given to a person from Dublin each year by the magazine..
List of winners
Year | Winner | Achievement |
---|---|---|
2008 | Brian O'Driscoll | Celtic League, and IRB International Try of the Year winner |
2009 | Ryan Tubridy | new host of The Late Late Show |
2010 | Bono | Lead singer of U2, campaigner |
Related events
Old City, New Dreams, is an annual event organised by the magazine featuring comedy, fashion, food and debates. The 2008 event took place in Dublin's Dundrum Town Shopping Centre. Speakers included Senator David Norris, newspaper columnist Ian O'Doherty, author Paul Howard and restaurateur Kevin Thornton.
In 2008 The Dubliner awarded the inaugural Dubliner of the Year Award to Irish rugby captain and former Lions captain Brian O'Driscoll.
Staff
Martha Connolly was the last editor of the magazine; previous editors included Emily Hourican, Eoin Higgins, Nicola Reddy and founding publisher Trevor White.
References
- A note from The Dubliner... Archived 2010-05-25 at the Wayback Machine, The Dubliner, 19 March 2010, retrieved 4 June 2010