logo
Brendan Gleeson: ‘I can't go into a pub any more. I really miss it'

Brendan Gleeson: ‘I can't go into a pub any more. I really miss it'

Irish Times3 days ago
'It was an odd experience,'
Brendan Gleeson
says with a smile. Seated in a rehearsal space in a leafy part of Dublin, the Irish actor is reflecting on the
episode he hosted in 2022
of Saturday Night Live, the US television sketch show that likes to have stars deliver questionable comedy skits to a studio audience.
'I didn't have experience of it, and I first said, 'No, absolutely not.' Then
Colin Farrell
said, 'You should do it,' and I know him well enough to trust him – that he's not a surfacy person, that there was something that was worth doing,' Gleeson says.
'The whole process was fascinating. They don't really want an act, and yet you're not yourself. They only make up jokes that week. You get things that half-work. It's very gruelling. And you don't know who the audience are. I didn't really want to watch it back.'
It's a measure of Gleeson's popularity that, although his hosting of the show with Farrell attracted a few nitpicky reviews, for many it felt akin to watching a beloved groom give a wedding speech after a long engagement. We were on his side, willing to live through the cringy bits in the service of seeing the show acknowledge a simple truth: Gleeson is a star.
READ MORE
With roles in The Guard, Paddington 2, The Tragedy of Macbeth, In Bruges, Joker: Folie à Deux, Calvary and
The Banshees of Inisherin
, Gleeson is one of Ireland's most prominent and charismatic actors. At 70, the Malahide resident – father of his fellow performers
Domhnall
and
Brian Gleeson
– is in the remarkable position of being busier than ever. Or, as he puts it, 'I haven't time to wash my face.'
We're meeting today because Gleeson is returning to the stage after a decade's absence, specifically to the 3Olympia Theatre in Dublin, followed by the Harold Pinter Theatre in London, where he will make his West End debut as Jack in The Weir, which is being directed by its writer,
Conor McPherson
. A tale of friends meeting for a drink in Co Leitrim when a stranger among them reveals an emotionally engulfing personal story, the play features little surface action yet delivers a remarkable punch.
The Weir: Brendan Gleeson with fellow cast members Seán McGinley, Owen McDonnell, Tom Vaughan-Lawlor and Kate Phillips. Photograph: Rich Gilligan
As I slip into the rehearsal space at Wesley House in Ranelagh, Gleeson and the rest of the cast are into their second week of line reads and stage preparations. They're not sweating it yet. Or not quite yet. Playing the part of the oleaginous estate agent Finbar,
Tom Vaughan-Lawlor
has thrown away his playbook to summon up the words from memory. So has
Seán McGinley
, in the role of bachelor Jim. Both have monologues to give. There are rueful chuckles as occasionally a prompt is needed or a line flubbed.
Gleeson is sitting between them, on a bar stool, his white shirt and suit jacket on, hair slicked back, a spider web of lines tracing his forehead, inhabiting his role with earthy precision. Across the room, McPherson, inscrutable in a cap and glasses, is a quiet, watchful presence for all the actors, who also include Kate Phillips and Owen McDonnell.
'I'm trying to allow them to be as close to themselves as they can be,' McPherson says later. 'Brendan has a huge presence. He's very powerful, very funny, but he can give you lots of depth. It's a pleasure. It's like if you get into a very expensive car: you don't have to do very much; it's just, 'We're going.''
'I'm bad for the planet?' the actor huffs amicably when I quote the expensive-car line back to him. But he's smiling. 'Ah, that's nice.' He enjoys collaborating with directors and has a healthy respect in particular for the Irish theatre-makers he has worked with over the years.
'In America, in a lot of TV, tailoring the dialogue is almost taken for granted. A lot of actors would take control of what they're doing themselves. But with somebody like Conor McPherson or
Martin McDonagh
, the rhythm of the language is so important; everything is so precise. You'd be an idiot to try and mess with it.'
Gleeson loves The Weir, which was written nearly three decades ago, and is set entirely in the bar where the group meet, for how it portrays us as Irish people. The stories that are told are pithy and revealing, a simulacrum of life in Ireland in the 1990s.
'Lads would come down to the pub, and the level of conversation that used to go on in those places: underestimate these people at your peril,' Gleeson says. 'There was an incredible beauty in the way people informed themselves. In England you'd go into a pub and you didn't strike up a conversation the way you would over there. In Ireland there was too much drinking; it was no harm for that to shift. But the pub was a centre whereby people touched base. It was like the postman coming, the small community, the ties that bind.'
There may be a certain irony for Gleeson in that the play is all about the quiet pint, something the actor no longer feels able to enjoy. He sighs when the subject comes up. 'I can't go into a place any more in terms of pubs, because it turns into selfie country. I really miss [it], particularly going into music sessions. You mightn't believe me, but people will do amazingly dumb things about interrupting you. I draw the line at funerals.'
I wonder if it's his roles in global film franchises – in the Harry Potter series he plays Mad-Eye Moody; in the world of Paddington he appears as the winningly abrasive chef Knuckles McGinty – that have made the difference in the past decade. Not so, Gleeson says. It's the mobile phones and the likelihood of people texting their friends to let them know if Gleeson might be sitting in on a session.
'The mobile phones mean you can do nothing. I'm not an elite musician. I was always running after the bus that way. But before you'd hear of a few quiet tunes somewhere, and you could go and you'd get a couple of hours spare [playing]. Now somebody has texted, and it's rammed within half an hour.' Does he feel isolated? 'I would, certainly. It does make the world smaller. Being able to drop into a place and just do the crossword and talk to somebody, you can't do it any more.'
A memory surfaces: the opening night of
Enda Walsh
's Ballyturk at Galway International Arts Festival in 2015. Following the play, which starred Cillian Murphy, the Gleeson family went with other theatregoers to an after-show gathering at a nearby hotel, where they clustered fireside in the lobby. You could feel the implicit plea from them in the ether: to be allowed to enjoy a night out without being bothered. I did leave them alone, but I will admit it was hard work pretending to ignore them.
Gleeson nods when I mention seeing them. 'It's only the last couple of years I've realised it's uncomfortable for everyone. It alters the equilibrium. So you just say, 'Okay, I've got this far. I'm 70 now, so I should really not be going into those places anyway.''
Gleeson has the complicating virtue of having come to acting relatively late. Formerly a teacher at Belcamp College in Balgriffin, in north Dublin, Gleeson was 34 when he was cast as Michael Collins in the RTÉ drama The Civil War.
His ascent was far from assured in the early days: casting agents wanted him for character roles, but whether playing the Dublin criminal Martin Cahill in John Boorman's The General, Mel Gibson's sidekick in Braveheart or the lead in McDonagh's Oscar-winning Six Shooter, Gleeson had an ease in front of the camera that meant directors wanted to work with him.
Ask the average Irish person about a Gleeson film and they might mention Hollywood big-budget affairs such as
Joker: Folie à Deux
or the Sundance TV series
State of the Union
, for which Gleeson received an Emmy nomination. But they're just as likely to wax lyrical about home-grown films such as The Guard, directed by John Michael McDonagh, or The Banshees of Inisherin, directed by Martin McDonagh, in which Gleeson riffed beautifully off Farrell as his forlorn former friend.
The Banshees of Inisherin: Brendan Gleeson with Colin Farrell in Martin McDonagh's film. Photograph: Jonathan Hession/Searchlight
Then there are the children's films, such as the glorious
Paddington 2
, that Gleeson cherishes making. 'I grew to like movies as against films,' Gleeson says. 'Especially kids' films. Why would you underestimate children? Their little worlds, their beliefs, when you see kids watching something, their big eyes out on saucers, they're living this. It's important, so you do it properly if you can.'
[
Brendan Gleeson the American is not nearly as agreeable Brendan Gleeson the Irishman
Opens in new window
]
When The Weir transfers to London, Gleeson will spend time with the junior members of the Gleeson tribe. 'It'll be exciting in terms of the lads are over there,' he says. 'I'll get to see my grandkids.'
He doesn't talk much about his wife or four children, but it's obvious they're a tight-knit crew. That last stage performance 10 years ago was with his sons Brian and Domhnall in
The Walworth Farce
, another of Enda Walsh's plays. 'I find myself asking more and more questions of them and to give me an insight into things I'm blind to or things I don't quite understand,' he says about their acting skills. He sounds proud of them. 'I am.'
The Walworth Farce: Brendan Gleeson with his sons Domhnall and Brian in Enda Walsh's play. Photograph: Photograph: Patrick Redmond
Gleeson could big up his sons or name-drop all day if he wanted, but it's obvious he chooses his words in interviews with care. 'I'm moaning a lot,' he says at one stage before course-correcting. It makes it all the more endearing to hear the warm delight in his voice when he occasionally allows in some discussion of his career high points, such as his Academy Award nomination, for best supporting actor, for The Banshees of Inisherin in 2023.
'I was thrilled to get an Oscar nomination,' he says. 'When I walked in and saw the people that were there in one room. I mean, you've Spielberg over there, all these film-makers.'
Gleeson worked with
Steven Spielberg
on the 2001 film
AI Artificial Intelligence
, a dystopian tale of robotic intelligence that has more resonance in today's bot-driven world than ever. The actor has recently been dealing with a deepfake version of himself that has been circulating on the internet, touting a cream that 'totally eliminates pain'.
'Two people sent it to me. I'm not on any of that stuff,' he says about social media. 'So I was blissfully unaware, and thought it was a joke. But then I realised, 'Jesus, are they asking people to actually press a link?' So I just wanted to say that I don't endorse anything other than support for the hospice.'
[
Despair among young people 'really, really scary', Brendan Gleeson says at hospice fundraiser
Opens in new window
]
Gleeson is a long-time campaigner for improved resources at
St Francis Hospice
in Raheny, in north Dublin, where both his parents spent their final stages of life; his galvanising social conscience is an important part of his character. It has caused more than one person to question if there's a role for him in politics. Or, say, in the Áras when the presidential role comes free?
[
'I would be dead now if it hadn't been for the hospice'
Opens in new window
]
'I'm quite opinionated,' Gleeson counters. 'I just think I'm not a good politician. I can't get to the place. I love
Michael D Higgins
for what he's done, what he's doing, his reckless energy and his positivity. Everything about what he does fills me with inspiration. I'm not good at that. I do get upset about things that are patently wrong, but I'm not the fixer of those issues. I just hope we can allow people to have a place to live. I think profit-making on homes is immoral.'
If politics is partly about the exchange of ideas, art can spark similarly big conversations. The Weir comes to Dublin at the same time that
The Pillowman
, by his friend and collaborator McDonagh, runs across town at the Gate Theatre. It's a controversial play that tackles themes of violence against children. When I tell Gleeson that I found McDonagh's play tough to watch, his gaze sharpens.
[
The Pillowman review: Anthracite-black comedy. The most appalling crimes
Opens in new window
]
'I heard there were people getting upset in the audience,' Gleeson says. 'Some people in particular places in their lives may not be able to handle it. Part of art is to face the brutality of the truth. That's why we keep Auschwitz. The idea of sheltering everybody from horrible consequences, it's like, if you've never been to an abattoir, that's where you go.
'Early on with Martin, I challenged him on something. I said, 'Are you just pushing the envelope for its own sake?' I said you've got to really know what you're doing. And he said, 'Everything I write is about love.' I realised with his work you don't hate anyone; you find the humanity.
'I did the same with John Boorman with The General. You go into a place where you're saying, 'This is inhuman.' No, this is human. This is humanity, I'm afraid.'
Gleeson puts himself through the wringer as an actor. In addition to his work on the forthcoming film adaptation by Emma Donoghue of H Is for Hawk and the TV series Spider-Noir, Gleeson has recently returned from Atlanta, where he was filming The Good Daughter, by the crime author Karin Slaughter. 'It was emotionally demanding and traumatising,' he says. 'I was wasted when I got back, in a head-space sense.'
The Weir will represent a palate-cleanser. It's a play that contains quiet truths; that suggests more than it shows. 'At the time of life I'm at, and in the zeitgeist where there's so much apocalyptic desperation, this is a beautiful piece of work,' Gleeson says. 'It's very profound.'
The play is likely to be the hottest ticket in town.
Anne Clarke
of
Landmark Productions
, its coproducer, is worried about one thing only: how to distribute the guest-list tickets on opening night. 'It's like Irish theatre royalty,' she says, laughing. 'Everybody wants to come. We're having these big meetings about how we can manage it.'
[
Landmark's Anne Clarke: 'Every producer, if they're honest, is a control freak'
Opens in new window
]
As for Gleeson, he's fretting about his lines. Well, that and the prospect of getting a break at some point. He smiles when he hears a
Leonard Cohen
lyric: 'I ache in the places where I used to play.' Seventy is treating him reasonably well, he says. But the body is creaky sometimes. 'I'm wiping the slate clean. I have to take a break. This year and last year was too much. I'll take time to smell the coffee, because you can run around and not see what you're looking at.'
Gleeson knows he's in the right place spiritually, in part because of the distance he has travelled in his life. 'I think I was okay as a teacher,' he says. 'When I found acting, I just knew. When I was writing down in my passport under occupation, and I wrote down 'actor', I felt: I'm home.'
The Weir
opens at 3Olympia Theatre, Dublin, on Wednesday, August 13th, with previews from Friday, August 8th. It runs until September 6th, then transfers to the Harold Pinter Theatre, in London, where it runs from September 12th until December 6th
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘The nation loved you': Mourners gather for funeral of Seán Rocks in Monaghan
‘The nation loved you': Mourners gather for funeral of Seán Rocks in Monaghan

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

‘The nation loved you': Mourners gather for funeral of Seán Rocks in Monaghan

'We here in Monaghan are very proud of Seán Rocks. We are very proud of his achievements. He was one of us.' Those lines were said by Canon Paddy McGinn to a large crowd gathered for the funeral of Seán Rocks in his native town of Monaghan on Monday. The actor and RTÉ presenter, who died on Wednesday after a brief illness, was 64. President Michael D Higgins was among the mourners who extended their sympathies to Rocks's wife Catherine in St Macartan's Cathedral. Directly afterwards, Sabina Higgins enfolded Catherine in a long hug. The length of the embrace felt testament to the shock, felt by all, that a man who had been on air presenting Arena, RTÉ's flagship arts and culture show the Friday before last, could be so suddenly gone. READ MORE 'We have many questions,' Canon McGinn said. 'Why Seán? Sometimes we have no answers.' Rocks's voice was 'soothing and consoling', said Canon McGinn. He had an ability 'to get the best out of people', while his listeners considered him a friend. [ 'I loved every day I worked with Seán and will miss him': tributes paid to beloved RTÉ presenter Seán Rocks Opens in new window ] Among the mourners were actors Stephen Rea, Ciarán Hinds, Aidan Gillen, Bronagh Gallagher and Stanley Townsend. Musicians Julie Feeney, Camille O'Sullivan and Colm Mac Con Iomaire were in attendance, as were novelists Patrick McCabe and Sinéad Gleeson. Taoiseach Micheál Martin was represented at the funeral by Commandant Joseph Glennon. In attendance from RTÉ were presenters Miriam O'Callaghan, Philip Boucher-Hayes, and RTÉ director general Kevin Bakhurst, as well as many who had worked with Rocks over the years, including producers Sinéad Egan and Kay Sheehy, and colleagues from Lyric FM, where Rocks had also worked. Quiet sobbing could be heard as the coffin was brought up, with Rocks's young sons, Christian and Morgan, in blazers and trainers, and Catherine leading the way, their hands on top of the coffin. Rocks met Kerry-born Catherine in 2004. 'You became the love of his life,' Canon McGinn told her. 'In 2015, Christian was born, and in 2017 Morgan was born. He was devoted to you.' Reflecting on Rocks's character, his great friend, the actor Marion O'Dwyer told mourners: 'Seán didn't send you a voice note, you got a personal podcast. The boys know whenever someone makes them laugh, that'll be their dad in heaven trying to make them laugh.' A pair of headphones, a box of Seamus Heaney poetry, a wooden spoon, a theatre award, and a family photograph were among the items presented by Rocks's family at the altar as symbols of his love of family and the arts. Heaney had been one of Rocks's lecturers when he did his master's degree in Anglo-Irish literature at UCD. As a boy he went to the local school, St Louis in Monaghan town, before attending Carysfort College to become a teacher. Based in Dundrum in Dublin, Rocks began presenting radio programmes on RTÉ Lyric FM in 2000, before moving on to RTÉ Radio 1. Among his achievements were serving as MC at events at Áras an Uachtaráin, and also serving as host MC at the State banquet at Dublin Castle for the visit of Queen Elizabeth II to Ireland in 2011. As an actor he performed in plays in the Abbey, Gate and Peacock theatres. Music was performed by Rocks's family and friends, including Conor Linehan, Ellen Cranitch, Ailish Lavelle, Martin McCormack and the Monaghan Folk Group. His friend, the actor Seamus Moran, delivered a reading. Gráinne Rice, Rocks's sister, sang a version of Be Not Afraid. Outside the cathedral, as blustery weather threatened to throw people off-balance, memories of Rocks were swapped. Many recalled his sense of mischief, his charm and his tremendous facilities as an actor and broadcaster. From the pulpit, the listeners were represented too, with Canon McGinn reading out some of the many tributes and letters of sympathy written on One listener, Helen from Dooks in Co Kerry, had quoted Raymond Carver: ''And did you get what/ you wanted from this life, even so?/ I did. And what did you want?/ To call myself beloved, to feel myself/beloved on the earth.' 'The nation loved you,' she concluded.

Brendan Gleeson can't go to pubs anymore without it becoming 'selfie country'
Brendan Gleeson can't go to pubs anymore without it becoming 'selfie country'

Extra.ie​

time4 hours ago

  • Extra.ie​

Brendan Gleeson can't go to pubs anymore without it becoming 'selfie country'

As Brendan Gleeson prepares to take to the Irish stage once more in Conor McPherson's The Weir, he has revealed that his ability to pop to the pub for a quiet pint has gone in recent years. The play follows a group of friends who meet for a quiet drink in Co Leitrim before a stranger in their midst makes a startling personal revelation, and will be staged in Dublin's 3Olympia Theatre this August until early September. When chatting in a recent interview about the production, the 70-year-old revealed there's a sense of irony to it, as the show focuses on a group of friends going for a quiet pint, but he's not really able to do that anymore. Domhnall Gleeson and Brendan Gleeson Pic: lbertofor Disney In recent years, Gleeson's star has risen even higher than it already was, earning an Oscar nomination for his performance in The Banshees of Inisherin, and he was even tapped to host the iconic Saturday Night Live. Coupled with the fact that most people live through their mobile phones, and he sighs thinking about how much he misses being able to go to the pub for a music session without being photographed or recorded. He told The Irish Times: 'I can't go into a place any more in terms of pubs, because it turns into selfie country. I really miss [it], particularly going into music sessions. You mightn't believe me, but people will do amazingly dumb things about interrupting you. I draw the line at funerals. Brendan Gleeson and Colin Farrell in The Banshees of Inisherin Pic: Searchlight Pictures/Moviestore/REX/Shutterstock 'The mobile phones mean you can do nothing. I'm not an elite musician. I was always running after the bus that way. But before you'd hear of a few quiet tunes somewhere, and you could go and you'd get a couple of hours spare [playing]. Now somebody has texted, and it's rammed within half an hour.' When asked if he feels isolated as a result, he revealed that he does as he simply can't 'pop into a place' to sit and chat to someone or do a crossword in peace. The Weir runs in Dublin until September, when it will then tranfer to London, where it will run until December, giving Gleeson plenty of time to spend with his grandkids who live in the English capital. Elsewhere, Brendan recently stated he won't take back calling Taoiseach Micheál Martin a 'moron' almost 20 years ago, but the actor added he now prefers a more constructive approach. The Hollywood star said it was the way he 'really felt at the time' after witnessing 'unacceptable' treatment at a hospital.

All Together Now 2025 highs and lows: ‘CMAT for president', €8 for two cans of Sprite
All Together Now 2025 highs and lows: ‘CMAT for president', €8 for two cans of Sprite

Irish Times

time7 hours ago

  • Irish Times

All Together Now 2025 highs and lows: ‘CMAT for president', €8 for two cans of Sprite

HIGHS CMAT's headline set CMAT solidified her place at the forefront of Irish music with her All Together Now headline set . Alongside her powerhouse performance, the Irish country-pop singer also got the crowd to do what she called the 'Dunboyne County Meath Two-Step', in which thousands of fans swayed from side to side, in a trance to her lyrics. They then applauded thunderously for a sign in the crowd that was shown on the main stage's screen: 'CMAT mar uachtarán' – 'CMAT for president'. After the performance she gave at Curraghmore Estate on Saturday night, they might just be right. [ CMAT's powerhouse set could be the best performance at All Together Now 2025 Opens in new window ] Irish artists ruling the weekend The other big stand-out performance was from Fontaines DC , who, like CMAT, drew one of the largest main-stage audiences of this year's festival. How thrilling to see Irish musicians at the very top – and perfectly comfortable there, to boot. [ Fontaines DC: Biggest Irish group since U2 hit ferocious highs at all-conquering homecoming gig Opens in new window ] Relocated Arcadia stage The steam-punk goth arena's new location made it easier to access and increased its capacity – a great innovation if you wanted to rave until 4am to hardcore techno accompanied by theatrical flames spewing from the baroque stage. Ollie, Gavin and James from Dublin arrive on site for All Together Now. This year the campsites were close to the main arena, meaning carrying gear in and out was less hassle than in previous years. Photograph: Dan Dennison Campsites' closeness The campsites' proximity to the main arena was an absolute win. It meant that, during the day, people could gather in the communal areas, get lunch and listen to the daytime acts – something that doesn't feel as viable at bigger festivals, such as Electric Picnic. The Bandstand area, in particular, had crowds sitting on the grass, catching up, having food and listening to acts throughout the day. READ MORE Chilling in the Curraghmore gardens One of the other ways that some of the weekend's 30,000 festivalgoers chilled out was by heading for the gardens of the Curraghmore Estate. Sitting back as a seanchoíche storytelling session unfolded in the background was the perfect way to get a quick respite. Getting a wave from the lucky few staying in the big house was a bonus. Festival look If you were to bottle up the vibes of Drury Street in Dublin and send them on the train down to Waterford, that would be All Together Now 2025. This year's festival look included jerseys, Fontaines DC and CMAT merch, short shorts and ruffled mini skirts, not to mention Pellador jumpers, Bohs jerseys – see Lows, below – and mullets. Also, solidarity to the girls wearing cowboy boots: the blisters can't be forgiving. Ecofriendly festivalgoers and a team of staff kept the area clean, constantly tidying up rubbish. Photograph: Dan Dennison Ecofriendly audience The arena felt very clean – much cleaner than at other festivals. This was presumably in part down to the staff who were constantly cleaning up rubbish, but also down to ecofriendly festivalgoers who made sure to take their waste away with them. LOWS Preposterous cost of food Festivalgoers felt the sting of the cost-of-living crisis at the festival's food trucks. Photograph: Dan Dennison The lowest price for a meal at an Irish festival is now €15 – assuming you don't want to a drink to go with it. Festivals are supposed to be where we go to escape the pressures of every day life, but the cost-of-living crisis was making its presence felt at All Together Now. At Glastonbury three-quarters of the food trucks have a £6 offering , according to the huge British festival. That sounds like an idea well worth emulating. Prices at the 24-hour Londis In what economy is it acceptable for two cans of Sprite to cost €8? In the economy of the All Together Now's campgrounds, it seems. But the flagship shop on what quickly became known as the strip – a string of shops that attracted behaviour similar to what you might see in Albufeira or Zante – was nevertheless a lifeline for many. It sold essentials like a pint of milk and meal-deal sandwiches, possibly sustaining thousands over the weekend. Water waits On the ecofriendly front, many people brought their own water bottles. This is great in theory, but the campsites could have had a few more taps to facilitate refilling them as the queues got pretty long at times. Bohs' Fontaines DC overload Bohemian FC's Fontaines DC shirts are eye-catching – and how great to see an Irish soccer team in the spotlight – but it would have been nice to see some variety around the site. Also, have the hipsters moved on and embraced GAA jerseys as ' League of Ireland is cool' fatigue sets in? The prominence of GAA club tops suggests that may be the case. Rain couldn't stop fans flocking to see Nelly Furtado perform on the main stage on the last night of All Together Now. Photograph: Kieran Frost/Redferns Sunday-night rain You always want to go out on top, so it was slightly disappointing when it began to drizzle on Sunday night, especially after a particularly dry and sunny weekend. ⁠It didn't stop the crowds from flocking to Nelly Furtado to round out the weekend, although it did mean the predrinks were rather wet if your group didn't think ahead of time and bring a marquee.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store