St. Patrick's Day
From Wikipedia: "Saint Patrick's Day (Irish: Lá ’le Pádraig or Lá Fhéile Pádraig), colloquially St. Paddy's ...
Approval Rate: 85%
Reviews 42
by jess1127
Thu Aug 30 2012This holiday is pointless... to me anyway...
by frankswildyear_s
Thu Oct 06 2011Clearly the 'holiday' that highest the highest co-relation to the forunes of pub owners in my home town. There really isn't much about the local events that relate to the history of Saint Patrick, the traditions of Ireland or the citation of the Catholic church. But the price of a pint of Guiness is often reduced by about 50 cents at the local Round Table. Typically I stay home that evening.
by dreaming0616
Thu Oct 06 2011Being that I am half Irish, my family celebrates St. Patty's day with booze, great times, and good food.
by ayn9b559
Thu Mar 17 2011This holiday is in rememberance of St. Patrick, one of the patron saints of Ireland. March 17th was the day he died. According to legend he drove all the snakes out of Ireland (killjoy) and brought Christianity to the county. He explained the complex concept of the trinity using the shamrock. A shamrock has three leaves, but it is all part of the same plant. It is one and three. The Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are all part of the same God but they are three different entities, each serving their own function. All of that is moot in North America however, as this is largely seen as a day for many to enjoy a night out on the town. I've already had my obligatory pint (or two) of beer, so I consider this a St. Patricks day well spent.
by love2stpatrick
Wed Mar 16 2011Christ beside me, Christ before me Christ behind me, Christ in me, Christ beneath me, Christ above me, Christ on my right, Christ on my left, Christ where I lay, Christ where I sit, Christ where I arise, Christ in the mouth of every man who speaks of me, Christ in every eye that sees me, Christ in every ear that hears me Written by St. Patrick This great Missionary to Ireland and great man of God is celebrated by people going to Pup's to get wasted. St. Patrick if he is watching this from the balcony in Heaven must be mortified.
by canadasucks
Sun Jul 04 2010Slovenly drunk holiday. White people go apeshit. It's the only day out of the year when the brothers are scared of whiteys. St. Paddy's day is quite canned, predictable, and corny to me. CS doesn't need an excuse or a special day to misbehave, drink, or screw (something Americans don't do enough or well enough). . . Still, it's not all bad. . .it's just not nearly as high on the holiday scale for me.
by jamie_mcbain
Sun Jul 04 2010Seems really fun, all though I pretty stay home, rather go pub crawling. The parades look like they are loads of fun, however.
by irishgit
Sun Jul 04 2010Update: Skimming through some of the old comments on this item is an interesting trek through bigotry, stupidity and misinformation. Original comment: You want the day off? Move to Newfoundland, it's a statutory holiday there. As to wearing green, I usually can't be bothered to remember, and I will not drink beer with green food colouring in it. But it's a good excuse to nip down to the boozer for a pint of Guinness. Like I need much of an excuse.
by jester002
Thu Jan 21 2010A good day for us guys not to wear green so the hottie in the down in receiving will pinch us. It's also the only suitable excuse to drink green beer and pretend your Irish for a day.
by moosekarloff
Fri Oct 17 2008A totally unnecessary and ridiculous holiday, which, by the way, is not celebrated in Ireland. Just another excuse for people to get sh*tfaced, as if they needed an excuse to begin with. If you like the sight of drunks reeling about in the streets, and people puking on themselves and fist fights erupting outside of gin mills, this is the holiday for you. Erin Go Barf.
by trebon1038
Tue Mar 18 2008I like St Patrick's day almost as much as Halloween. Its fun to see people enjoying themselves so much...the servers had on all kinds of gadgets...green antler like headbands with shamrocks...flashing rings, necklaces and earrings...one customer came in with glasses, hat and some flashing things around his neck. Everyone out was having fun!
by loerke
Sun Mar 16 2008As a kid in Catholic school, I believed that the Irish ran the world, because this was the day they could terrorize the rest of us with impunity. As I grew older, I learned a little history, and discovered that I was sadly mistaken. The Irish, particularly the Catholic Irish, have survived a brutally oppressive past. As a result, many of the Irish people I know are pissed that their complex history gets reduced to this holiday, with its tacky staples like shamrocks, bagpipes, and beers with food coloring in it. I am starting to think that this holiday is really more for the benefit of the bar and restaurant business. Nonetheless, if you can avoid the parades and go out with your friends (whether Irish or not) instead, it is a fine excuse to down a few pints or some Jameson's whiskey. (Like I need an excuse.) Just pour out a little in memory of that history.
by randyman
Sat Mar 18 2006I appreciate any holiday that calls for a good time. I don't get the anger in some of the previous reviewers. If you don't like it just don't celebrate it. Me, I made Corned Beef and Cabbage last night as I always do.
by traderboy
Fri Mar 17 2006Ah, shore'n 'tis Saint Paddy's Day! I've never really taken issue with the decorative nature of this holiday (the greening of all things can get sickening, but it's over a day later); not being one to partake of spiritous beverages has also made me moderately indifferent to that aspect of the day, as well. Where I become less-than-sanguine is with the "historic" recountings of "Saint" Patrick, whose real name was Maewyn Succat, and wasn't of Irish descent (he was born in Scotland in 387). Kidnapped by Irish looters when he was 16, he was sold as a slave to a guy named Milchu, a local warlord who ruled what would now be present-day Antrim. Tended sheep until he was 22 (why are most prominent religious personalities shepherds?), when voices in his head told him to beat cheeks back to Britain (he attributed the voices to "angelic intervention"; most would've chalked it up to good sense). Made it back home, and dedicated himself to Providence by becoming a priest under the instruction of S... Read more
by oscargamblesfr_o
Fri Mar 17 2006I don't celebrate it myself, nor wear green, but am not ashamed of my ancestry either. Something tells me that reviewer samjung must have got a mcbeating by a leprechaun in third grade.
by donovan
Fri Mar 17 2006Having Irish blood in my body I say "what's the big deal?" Why can't the Irish have their day? "Donovan," such a good Irish name! (PS: I don't drink but I love the color green)
by irishturtle
Fri Mar 17 2006I am irish and this is not a celebration of Irish heritage, nor should one need to celebrate ones heritage by having a holiday for it. When will people quit making excuses to create useless celebrations? St.Patrick was really just a Catholic saint who brought Christianity to Ireland. He was an honored and admired figure to the Irish Catholics during that time. He came up with the idea of the clover and attached it as a symbol to the holy trinity. They then added a bunch of irish pegan/celt legends such as the leprechaun and a pot of gold and before you know it you had this day called "Saint Patrick's Day."
by earthbound
Mon Mar 06 2006Personally speaking, I enjoy this holiday. It comes during lent, and the tradition was that you could take a break from whatever you had given up for lent on St. Patrick's Day. This appealed to young and old alike. Catholicism was always very much part of the Irish identity, and when the Republic was young, this and the Irish language were two tangible elements that distinguished Ireland from it's empire-building neighbour to the east. So the holiday, which is technically a religious holiday, was always infused with a sense of nationalism, and it is really celebrated as sort of an Irish 4th of July. I admit that I am somewhat overwhelmed by its popularity in other countries, and have to believe that a large part of the appeal of the holiday is that it is traditionally celebrated with lashings of whiskey and beer and that sort of celebration tends to have a popular touch in many cultures. This year, I will be in Singapore on Paddy's Day, so I am curious to see what they offer (alth... Read more
by mariusqeldroma
Wed Dec 28 2005A lovely holiday for meriment. Just try not to overdo it if you have to drive (hick).
by eschewobfuscat_ion
Wed Dec 28 2005In the older, northeastern, more ethnic cities this "holiday" is still celebrated by many. "Amateur Night, " I like that. When I lived in Syracuse, on Tipperary Hill, this was the only day bigger than the Regatta. As a young buck, we'd all get out of work early and meet at Coleman's or Nibsey Ryan's. Under the upside down traffic light (near "Stone-Thrower's Park" today) a huge green shamrock would be painted on the street and people would do jigs and riels there all day and all night. Whew.
by drummond
Tue Dec 27 2005Hated this holiday as a kid when I forgot to wear green to school. Always tried to say that I was wearing fruit of the loom and my apple wasn't ripe.
by bugahane
Tue Dec 27 2005I am zero percent Irish, so no, I do not celebrate this day, although I will go and have a plate of corned beef and cabbage. I do not have a problem with non-Irish celebrating this day, people like to have fun, there's nothing wrong with that, just like Halloween. Why must every holiday have these rigid codes as to why it is celebrated and who can celebrated it?
by genghisthehun
Fri Jun 24 2005Martha, who can hold her booze, always calls the local St. Paddys day celebration, Amateurs' Night. I have some buddys who are retired like me and we meet, get a snoot full, and have a good time.
by sfalconer
Thu Mar 17 2005What a terrible excuse for a holiday, he is the patron saint of Ireland not the USA yet we celebrate it more than the Irish it makes no sense. I wear red white a blue every March 17th.
by skizero
Thu Mar 17 2005i've never been a monumental fan of this holiday, even though i overindulge in booze daily. just something about going to a bar with overzealous folks who can't hold their liquor pouring back a green beer. not my bag. also when i was a kid at Pittsburgh's annual St. Patrick's Day parade, Ronald McDonald was there(although i thought he was Scotish?) anyway, the punk was throwing bagels from a moving car and one smacked me right in the mouth....lousy corporate clown.
by realirishgirl
Wed Jan 26 2005you all claim to have a bit of irish in ye. but do u know wat it means to be irish. it may be a day of drinking and praying but it is also a day we remember st paddy converted us.im proud to be irsih all year around. slan go foil and have a great st paddy's day this year
by tocwelsh
Thu Jan 06 2005Hey Paddy, Whisky and Guinness day and be OIRISH for a day.....
by birdegal202
Sat Jan 01 2005The leprachaun told me to burn things.
by daccory
Mon Nov 01 2004This Irish celebration seems to be spreading throughout the anglophone world. Why, I have no idea, nor would I want to celebrate it unless I were in Ireland or my hosts were Irish.
by abichara
Wed Mar 17 2004Even though I am not Irish nor Catholic, I haven't forgotten to observe the holiday of Ireland's patron saint. I am wearing green to celebrate today in anticipation that some of that luck of the Irish will rub off on me. Of course, today can't be complete without a drink in celebration of all things Irish. That is why me and my friends (along with one of my professors!) are planning after class to go to the local pub for a beer.
by andrewscott
Wed Mar 17 2004Just ate some corned beef and cabbage for lunch today to feel in touch with my Irish roots. Would you believe there are nine times as many people in the United States who claim to have Irish roots as there are people currently living in Ireland? In America, St. Paddy's Day doesn't have the same religious significance that it does in Ireland. It's not even an offical national holiday. Essentially, it's become an occasion swill green beer, wear flamboyant green clothing, and parade drunkenly through the streets singing a mangled version of Danny Boy. Forgetting to wear green on March 17 is not advised, as some Americans (Irish or not) will use this as an excuse to pinch you. Legend tells us St. Patrick drove the snakes from Ireland, although historians insist there weren't any snakes in Ireland to drive out. Still, Ireland's beloved patron saint is credited with converting the Irish to Christianity using Ireland's national symbol, the three-leafed shamrock, to teach the concept of t... Read more
by kolby1973
Thu Nov 27 2003St Patrick's Day has always been my favorite holiday. This is my one day of year that I treat like my own birthday. Better than Christmas, too !
by ladyshark4534
Sun Sep 14 2003Stupid holiday. Pointless. No reasons to celebrate it at all. We don't even get school off!
by redoedo
Sun Apr 20 2003My family is of Irish Catholic origin, so I have a soft spot in my heart for this holiday. However, I really don't care too much about it anymore- and am getting tired of getting pinched when I forget to wear green. However, it does give you an excuse to dress ridiculously for a day.
by lukskywlkr
Fri Nov 01 2002Wear green or you get pinched. Simple enough.
by snoopy
Thu Mar 14 2002I don't like eating corn beef and cabbage and drinking beer and I'm not even Irish.
by potch1214
Tue Nov 27 2001Everybody is Irish on St. Patrick's Day! Even this Italian-American kid from the suburbs of Jersey. I love it!
by the_waffler
Sat Nov 03 2001The Perfect Day! GReen, green, green!
by chaotician23
Thu Oct 11 2001Pretty cool! I think Leprechauns are awesome!
by kiwi8577
Wed Jul 04 2001This is my favorite holiday, being part Irish. I just wish the people of this country (USA) knew the actual meaning of it. It is a religous holiday in Ireland, people. NOT a day to party and get drunk!! Read up about it, okay?!
by castlebee
Tue Apr 17 2001When I was in college, I was surprised to hear this is actually observed as a religious holiday in Ireland -since it has more or less become an excuse to have a parade and a big drinking party in the U.S. I think it may have been adopted here for just that reason. I like it though, because I like to remember my Irish roots and think of how St. Patrick explained the Holy Trinity using the shamrock. Such a simple, beautiful story. Oh, and in grade school I loved these great shamrock cookies the room mothers always gave us at our St. Patrick's day parities. Erin go braugh!
by wiggum
Sat Apr 14 2001My enjoyment of Saint Patrick's Day has varied wildly over the years - maybe 2 stars when I was in grade school, 5 stars when I was in college, and 3 stars today. The problem in grade school, of course, came when you forgot to wear something green, and all the kids would pinch the hell out of you. But then in college, when we didn't need much of an excuse to drink too much, St. Patrick's Day became a day of amazing parties (my favorite college party ever was a huge all-day St. Patrick's party). Now, though, St. Patrick's Day just kind of comes and goes without much fuss either way...