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The Clubhouse Bar
An Irish-American View of St. Patrick's Day
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<blockquote data-quote="O&#039;Rothlain" data-source="post: 107189"><p>There is a reverse side to this as well...</p><p>My Father-in-law (from Belfast) gets treated like he's flippin' royalty when he's in the states. "Oh, say that again!" "I'm Irish Too!" "Oh, I just love your accent...it's like my great-grandfathers" "I'm going to Ireland next summer, any advice?"</p><p>My God, people line up to talk to the man...granted he's funny, and a good storyteller. He works the Irish mojo when he's in America.</p><p>There are so many of we Irish-Americans in the US dying to reconnect. If I were in Ireland, I'd try to find a way to exploit that a bit.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="O'Rothlain, post: 107189"] There is a reverse side to this as well... My Father-in-law (from Belfast) gets treated like he's flippin' royalty when he's in the states. "Oh, say that again!" "I'm Irish Too!" "Oh, I just love your accent...it's like my great-grandfathers" "I'm going to Ireland next summer, any advice?" My God, people line up to talk to the man...granted he's funny, and a good storyteller. He works the Irish mojo when he's in America. There are so many of we Irish-Americans in the US dying to reconnect. If I were in Ireland, I'd try to find a way to exploit that a bit. [/QUOTE]
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The Clubhouse Bar
An Irish-American View of St. Patrick's Day
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