Reeling In The Years 2010 ⭐ Essential
But the episode’s brilliance lies in its turns. Just as the viewer is drowning in the dole queues and the destruction of the health service, the calendar flips to summer. And then, the sun comes out in Kilkenny.
Yet, it is essential viewing. It captures the paradox of Ireland: a nation that can be brought to its knees by bankers and bureaucrats, but lifted to the heavens by four men in a horse-drawn carriage carrying a silver cup. The episode’s final shot—the Tipp team holding the Liam MacCarthy as the credits roll over a hauntingly beautiful, low-tempo track—leaves you with the message that defined 2010: We lost our savings, our jobs, and our innocence. But for one day in September, we won everything. reeling in the years 2010
From the opening frames, the tone is set not by a thumping dance track, but by a somber, anxious hum. The episode wastes no time plunging into the mire of the post-Celtic Tiger collapse. The first quarter is a relentless assault of bad news: the IMF/EU bailout, the stripping of the cloth from the crucified statues of our economic sovereignty, and the endless talk of "austerity," "bailouts," and the "blanket guarantee." For anyone who lived through it, the footage of queues outside banks, "Anglo Tapes" soundbites, and the hollow faces of politicians announcing yet another budget cut is viscerally uncomfortable. The series' signature irony—juxtaposing bleak news with upbeat pop—is at its sharpest and most cruel here. But the episode’s brilliance lies in its turns