ship If you had been relying on the Belfast media for news of what was happening in the world over the last few days the big story was “ships moor in harbour”. A fleet of  spaceships from half a dozen advanced civilisations all landing on the same day could not have generated any more incessant or hyperbolic reporting.  What actually happened was that a bunch of sailing ships had raced each other across the Atlantic and dropped anchor in Belfast, a city with a port.

As the list of articles on the Belfast Telegraph site shows no superlative was unused and no heart string was untugged. The TV and radio were worse. Endless interviews with nine year olds- “what do you think of the tall ships kid?” gave the usual nine year old insight into everything “it’s great, dead brilliant”. Minor local celebrities were asked “what do you think of the tall ships?”. They’d been listening to the nine year olds and mostly said “it’s great, dead brilliant”. From Thursday to Sunday it was constant.

A major part of the reporting was along the lines of “Belfast seemed like a great place to be and it made one wonder how the same city was home to the psychopaths who murdered and maimed for three decades”.  If this means anything it means that the author finds it hard to imagine that a city can find space for both competent local government officials, a business community out to make money and sectarian gangsters. There’s a desperation to wish that the place was more like Eastbourne or Paris which has been a mainstay of anguished Norn Irish liberalism which would be touching if it wasn’t so naive.

And that’s the point really. The city’s mayor claims to believe “Belfast is now widely regarded as a happening, must-see city. This is Belfast’s moment and we have to build on the legacy of the most successful and biggest event our city has seen.” It seems to me that if half of the statelet’s population feels the need to visit an event like that then the place lacks much in the way of great visitor attractions. The city’s only museum has been shut for ages and insiders are sceptical about the official reopening date being met. Driving down the  Falls Road you have to stop yourself from laughing out loud when you see the office of the “West Belfast Tourism Development Board” or somesuch just a few days away from a “suicide awareness” office set among a strip of kebab shops, take away pizza places and football themed pubs. It’s hard to say if they look worse in the rain or the sun. Looking at the tourists hunched forward into the rain you would forgive them for breaking into tears every time they remembered that this was their main holiday of the year.

Belfast isn’t a bad city but it ain’t Paris.

3 responses to “Sea fever sweeps Belfast”

  1. There was a bit of fun at the Tall Ships. The MOD cancelled a Royal Marine band performance because éirígí organised a protest against them. As it happened, there were also three British warships docked in Belfast at the same time, and the Royal Navy were mixing with the crowd trying to come up with more fodder for Afghanistan, so the protest went ahead.

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  2. splinteredsunrise Avatar
    splinteredsunrise

    You missed the punchline. Some bloke from the city council was on the lunchtime news today saying they were already in negotiations to bring the Tall Ships back.

    I like ships as much as anyone, but surprisingly little of the maritime festival had anything to do with seafaring. Most of it seemed to be taken up with fireworks, the continental market, and Hugo Duncan singing. And sure you can see Hugo any time.

    The attendance was huge, though I noticed it was quite a well-heeled crowd, with not many spides in evidence. I think it’s a big aspirational thing for the Norn Iron middle class. Which makes Naomi Long the perfect mayor to host proceedings.

    Mind you, they must be sick up in Derry.

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  3. splinteredsunrise Avatar
    splinteredsunrise

    Talking of civic boosterism, I don’t see any coverage in the Andytown News. Not the right demographic, I suppose.

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