It's about that time of the week where we start thinking about how we're going to spend our weekend.
Whether it's letting loose on a dancefloor, spending all your payday wages or getting stick into some divine culture - you name it, we've covered it.
Now all you have to do is choose...
1. Stylesoko Sample Sale
Stylesoko is a deadly brand based around ordinary wear, with an Asian fusion - and it's having a whopper sample sale this weekend.
There'll be models, and music, and it's being hosted in the Kung Fu Club in the Chocolate Factory from 12pm - 4pm. Tickets however are limited, so to bag yourself one or to find out more info - click right here .
2. Summer Nights BBQ at Dublin Zoo
Dublin Zoo will once again be opening its doors to a limited number of people from 6.30pm ‘til 11:30pm this Saturday evening for their famous Summer Nights BBQ.
Attendees will be able to experience the night sights and sounds of Dublin Zoo, enjoy an exclusive after-hours tour and special keeper talks, followed by a BBQ and live music.
Keen? Buy tickets right here, and remember that this event is strictly over 18s.
3. Nasty Women
Nasty Women is a night of live music inspired by 19-year-old Nina Donovan's powerful spoken word piece/poem in The Workman's Club this Sunday evening.
Tired of racism, homophobia, sexism, fraud, ignorance, misogyny and blatant disrespect aimed at women in her America; Donovan’s poem ‘Nasty Women’ was then performed as a speech at the Women’s March in Washington by Ashley Judd as a stamp of resistance against the new leader of their country.
Expect everything from Beyonce to Tupac and En Vogue to Kanye. Entry is free, and dancing goes on until late. But get on down early, as this will fill up real quick like.
7. 2017 May Dublin Flea Market
Good news for vintage clothes fanatics - as the Dublin Flea is back. A bizarre bazaar of vintage clothing, bric-a-brac and what nots - this haven of finds kicks off this Sunday at 11am at the Dublin Food Co-op, The Green Door Market, and on the square at Newmarket, Dublin 8.
However, before making arrangements, they do ask:
''Please come by foot, bike or bus - less fumes, less parking stress, more fun.''
Sure there you have it - absolutely loads to get stuck into.
Robin Gill: The Irish chef behind acclaimed London restaurants returns to Dublin for a burger pop-up collab with Dash Burger This Saturday at Hen’s Teeth from 17:00 Robin Gill’s voice carries the easy lilt of someone who grew up within earshot of Dublin Bay, though his culinary career has largely unfolded across the Irish Sea. […]
A Skort by Any Other Name On a humid afternoon this weekend at St Peregrine’s GAA Club Blanchardstown, west of Dublin, thirty camogie players took the field not in the sport’s traditional skorts, but in shorts. They weren’t in war paint or waving placards but they may as as well have been. The Kilkenny and […]
Robin Gill: The Irish chef behind acclaimed London restaurants returns to Dublin for a burger pop-up collab with Dash Burger This Saturday at Hen’s Teeth from 17:00 Robin Gill’s voice carries the easy lilt of someone who grew up within earshot of Dublin Bay, though his culinary career has largely unfolded across the Irish Sea. […]
A Skort by Any Other Name On a humid afternoon this weekend at St Peregrine’s GAA Club Blanchardstown, west of Dublin, thirty camogie players took the field not in the sport’s traditional skorts, but in shorts. They weren’t in war paint or waving placards but they may as as well have been. The Kilkenny and […]
Robin Gill: The Irish chef behind acclaimed London restaurants returns to Dublin for a burger pop-up collab with Dash Burger This Saturday at Hen’s Teeth from 17:00 Robin Gill’s voice carries the easy lilt of someone who grew up within earshot of Dublin Bay, though his culinary career has largely unfolded across the Irish Sea. […]
A Skort by Any Other Name On a humid afternoon this weekend at St Peregrine’s GAA Club Blanchardstown, west of Dublin, thirty camogie players took the field not in the sport’s traditional skorts, but in shorts. They weren’t in war paint or waving placards but they may as as well have been. The Kilkenny and […]
The once-reliable rail line is now making people late, miserable, and poor. For months now, regular passengers have faced delays, confusion, crowding, and rising fares. At the core of the problem is a pattern all too familiar in public transport systems: big-picture ambition undercut by everyday mismanagement.What happened in Dublin over the past six months […]
The once-reliable rail line is now making people late, miserable, and poor. For months now, regular passengers have faced delays, confusion, crowding, and rising fares. At the core of the problem is a pattern all too familiar in public transport systems: big-picture ambition undercut by everyday mismanagement.What happened in Dublin over the past six months […]
Remember 2007? Every Irish Leaving Cert oral exam was essentially a panic attack punctuated by shaky mentions of “cúlú eacnamaíochta.” Now, the discourse is back but 2025-ified. Instead of being pumped into us via well meaning language teachers, this time it is fuelled by TikTok sleuths dissecting every minor inconvenience as proof we’re already in […]
A survival guide for the tragically trendy now being bullied by signage. So. It’s sunny. You’ve got your tiny sunglasses on, your €17 graphic tee is cropped just enough to show the tattoo you got in a moment of heartbreak, and your Sambas have barely touched grass. You’ve done your civic duty and supported a […]
Waking up at 5AM is slightly more tolerable when there’s the Best Sunrise Views in Dublin and the opportunity to flex on main. There’s a specific kind of person who voluntarily wakes up at sunrise. They’re either spiritually awakened, deeply anxious, on a wellness bender, or just trying to feel something before the workday starts. […]