Because the Irish see 6am close as a place where people can go boozing until the morning and not a place to dance all night.
interesting when you go on holidays to Europe, last year in France I saw groups of teenagers happily going into a restaurant and getting something to eat, on their own, with no adults. That culture does no occur here to the same degree.I was away with my 17 year old son at the weekend. He doesn't drink. Some of his mates drink a bit, others don't drink at all. There is no where for them to go and hang out. He and his friends aren't the only ones, Ireland doesn't have anywhere for young people to go besides the pub...a place they don't really want to be
That's where the drinks industry generally, the retailers and manufacturers, is seeing growth.The Zero products are working well.
That's another issue. People don't go out and meet each other. I used to go out at the weekends, meet friends and girls. Now it's online and a small percentage of people on dating apps are getting results while others just give up. With people not wanting to drink pints and wfh, the opportunity for young people to find a mate is diminished.People are in constant contact with each other via the socials. Maybe they just want a detox from each other and see no value in going for pints anymore.
100%. I was in Pamplona a few weeks ago and there were loads of young people sitting in the bars/ restaurants around the square having food and a drink. Of course, a lot of these towns have a central square where people can congregate and the weather.interesting when you go on holidays to Europe, last year in France I saw groups of teenagers happily going into a restaurant and getting something to eat, on their own, with no adults.
A lot of them are playing sport. That is part of the reason why they have no interest in drinking, they take their sport seriously.Why don't the feckless youngsters mentioned earlier in the thread with nothing to do and nowhere to do it in, pull on a pair of togs a jersey and a pair of boots? Just a thought.
I wouldn't regarding social media stuff as a replacement for meeting people for real in a pub. Yes it is happening less but I think people appreciate alot more now because it takes relatively more effort and you have to come out of your comfort zone a bit in comparison to posting on social media. Also alot of social media is fake and exaggerated, very hard to be fake in real life thoughthink it's just a combination of a lot of factors that's seeing the demise of the drink only pub. People are in constant contact with each other via the socials. Maybe they just want a detox from each other and see no value in going for pints anymore. It seems to be more of 'an occasions' venture to the pub these days
But regarding the declining number of pubs, a lot of the licences and drinkers that were used by pubs have now maybe gone to GAA clubs. Once upon a time in rural areas, the only sporting clubs that had showers, changing rooms, committee rooms and bars were the rugby, tennis, and hockey clubs. Fast backwards to the end of my rugby-playing career, for home matches, we used the facilities of the GAA club, as did the boxing club.
A 10% reduction on duty would represent about 7c incl vat on a shot of spirits and about 6.5c on a pint of beer.
Do pubs really think this will make a difference?
More than that, the blandness of and lack of choice in pub beers is utterly depressing.The VFI / LVA documents always ignore the elephant in the room: the costs charged by the dominant brewers Diageo and Heineken.
Pubs are especially poor value for wine drinkers or those who like spirits and mixers.They rarely go out for drinks in a pub as considered poor value for money.
Nightclubs have died a death. Report in The Irish Times this morning that the average European nightclub closes at 6am. In Ireland, it's 2:30am. Why? Because the Irish see 6am close as a place where people can go boozing until the morning and not a place to dance all night.
Don't know I'm afraid. New licence application maybe.Does a GAA club require the transfer of a licence from a pub that closes down?
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