I disagree - I'd feel cheated without a good speech or two. Particularly for those who only one or other of the happy couple, it's always nice to get a bit of an insight into their background.As well as that, you hear one best mans speech and you've more or less heard them all, rubbish jokes and congratulations.
YepJust want to run this by you all to see what you think. Bride is from kerry and the groom is from tipp.. I was thinking something along the lines of
Well, as you know herself is from kerry and himself is from tipp. I wonder how that'll work out tonight. Herself will bring the poise, the power and the romance associated with the kingdom. Himself, on the other hand will just whip the hurl out and it's game on!!
Too crude?
Just want to run this by you all to see what you think. Bride is from kerry and the groom is from tipp.. I was thinking something along the lines of
Well, as you know herself is from kerry and himself is from tipp. I wonder how that'll work out tonight. Herself will bring the poise, the power and the romance associated with the kingdom. Himself, on the other hand will just whip the hurl out and it's game on!!
Too crude? Or light hearted enough that I might get away with it?!!
Not many ways to tone it down though. I think it will just be left out!
if the majority are GAA fans then say it...we've all become so PC that some funny stuff gets omitted
There are plenty of GAA fans who would consider it crude and inappropriate for a wedding. They're not all pint-swilling, pot-bellied hicks you know.
Just want to run this by you all to see what you think. Bride is from kerry and the groom is from tipp.. I was thinking something along the lines of
Well, as you know herself is from kerry and himself is from tipp. I wonder how that'll work out tonight. Herself will bring the poise, the power and the romance associated with the kingdom. Himself, on the other hand will just whip the hurl out and it's game on!!
Too crude? Or light hearted enough that I might get away with it?!!
My point remains about society being too PC...it takes a brave man to say things that others "deem" PC. Frankie Boyle springs to mind...
I am a GAA fan, played all my life both hurling & football and I'm not a pint swilling pot-bellied hick either. Loads of guests at our wedding played GAA or their girlfriends/wives would have attended matches, functions etc over the years too.
My point remains about society being too PC...it takes a brave man to say things that others "deem" PC. Frankie Boyle springs to mind...
Does it really take a 'brave man' to make jokes about people with Downs Syndrome having bad hairstyles, bad fashion sense. old parents and short life spans. That's not my definition of 'brave'.My point remains about society being too PC...it takes a brave man to say things that others "deem" PC. Frankie Boyle springs to mind...
In all fairness, I'm responding to your off-topic point. I guess that given we are in the 'shooting the breeze' section, it's not a huge deal either way.Complainer, you are moving the goalposts/off topic here...I dont mind.
So just to be clear, you are OK with using Paki jokes (ref Bernard Manning), Biafra/Ethopia 'skinny' jokes, spa/crip/looney bin jokes, poof/fag/queer jokes and all that other stuff that used to be considered 'comedy' prior to 1980?Take Tommy Tiernan, he was fairly unrepentant about his jokes recently on Liveline. Jokes are jokes was his point as is mine.
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