logo
Meet the group singing sea shanties across the Twin Cities

Meet the group singing sea shanties across the Twin Cities

Axios3 days ago
On a sweltering summer day in mid-July, over 120 strangers crammed into an Irish pub with pints of Guinness in hand to sing an unusual tune for a landlocked state: a sea shanty.
The big picture: For over 15 years, a group of Minnesotans have been convening at Twin Cities pubs, parks and patios for Shanty Sings — dedicated spaces to sing traditional folk songs about oceans, lakes, fishing and other water-related topics.
This group has no official name, little online presence and, outside of the people who create the Facebook events, no leaders — its existence is spread by word of mouth and by those who happen upon the Sings in search of a pint.
How it works: Anyone is welcome to show up and lead the group in song, though their tune must be about water in some way and have a repeating line that's easy for newcomers to learn on the fly.
Instruments are not allowed and song leaders are discouraged to use lyric books. In the spirit of the art form, songs are often passed down to newcomers by those in the know.
Fun fact: P articipants have included shape note singers, Morris dancers, Renaissance Festival-goers, barbershop quartet members and younger folks who became interested after sea shanties trended on TikTok, longtime participants Chuck Lentz and Doug McNair told Audrey. Everyone interviewed had a different story on how the group began.
What they're saying: A Shanty Sing may share some similarities with a church choir, but many members said the camaraderie and passion has been unlike any other vocal group they've been in.
"Singing shanties [by memory] at the top of your lungs … It's the best therapy I've ever had," McNair said.
If you go: Find the Shanty Sing at the Dubliner on the second Monday of each month, Merlin's Rest on the third Monday and Wabun Picnic Area in Minnehaha Regional Park on the fourth Monday.
"Do you want to be able to walk into a place, have a drink with your friends and feel so much better at the end of the night than you did at the beginning? If so, try the Sing," McNair said.
Audrey's thought bubble: I started my Monday with no knowledge of this event and ended it arm-in-arm with strangers belting "Bully in the Alley." A welcoming group and a very fun time.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dog Adopted by Fishing Family Has Hilarious Reaction to Meeting First Fish
Dog Adopted by Fishing Family Has Hilarious Reaction to Meeting First Fish

Newsweek

time10 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Dog Adopted by Fishing Family Has Hilarious Reaction to Meeting First Fish

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A rescue dog recently adopted by a family of keen anglers was left totally unimpressed by his first encounter with a fish. Kevin the chocolate Labrador retriever has become a social media sensation, after his new owners shared a video of him getting to grips with a family tradition: fishing. Posted to their TikTok account, @chippingchipper, on July 29, Kevin could be seen sitting on a boat, a misty lake visible in the early-morning background, alongside their other dog, German shepherd Odin. Their owner had caught a fish, and before returning it to the water, offered it to the dogs for a sniff. And Kevin, curious, went for it right away—only to instantly pull a disgusted face, shake his head back and forth, and begin retching, as the woman behind the camera burst out laughing. The man then turned around to put the fish back in the lake, and Odin followed him to the edge of the boat, as if to make sure it was really gone, while Kevin hung back. Their owner wrote in a caption: "One was raised on the boat, the other is new to the family. Can you guess who is who?" TikTok users were in stitches, awarding the video more than 300,000 likes, with one writing: "Something about a dog gagging is so hilarious," and another joking: "The lab report wasn't positive." "One is salivating, the other almost throwing up," another pointed out, with another writing: "Kevin says NO THANK YOU." Plenty of commenters shared their love for Kevin's name, with one writing: "I love animals with human names." But his owner admitted they "can't take the credit," as "he's our rescue and we couldn't imagine changing [his name]. Fits his personality!" Since their first video went viral, Kevin's adopters have been sharing more videos of their two dogs, with Kevin slowly getting to grips with life on the water. In one, he plays on a deck, rolling back and forth on his back, before accidentally landing in the water with a splash—but appears quite happy while swimming back to shore. And in their most recent video, Kevin's owner gives him another opportunity to sniff a freshly-caught fish. But this time, he doesn't take his new dad up on the offer. Kevin the rescue dog got his first sniff of a fish, and wasn't impressed. Kevin the rescue dog got his first sniff of a fish, and wasn't impressed. TikTok @chippingchipper As a Labrador, Kevin is already more likely than other breeds to enjoy life by the water: according to a vet-reviewed report from PetMD, golden retrievers and Labrador retrievers often enjoy swimming. Poodles, English and Irish setters, and Newfoundland dogs are also included in the list of breeds who enjoy swimming, alongside dogs specially-bred for water such as the Porrtuguese water dog and American water spaniel. Newsweek has contacted @chippingchipper via TikTok for comment on this story. Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@ with some details about your best friend and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.

Ozzy Osbourne laid to rest near lake at home in private funeral
Ozzy Osbourne laid to rest near lake at home in private funeral

New York Post

timea day ago

  • New York Post

Ozzy Osbourne laid to rest near lake at home in private funeral

Farewell, Ozzy. Black Sabbath legend Ozzy Osbourne was reportedly laid to rest next to the lake of his Buckinghamshire home on Thursday following his shocking death last week. Funeral guests were seen departing a discreet country hotel and arriving at the private memorial held at the Osbourne family's house. Ozzy's longtime guitarist, Zakk Wylde, was there and led the mournful procession. 26 Zakk Wylde attends Ozzy Osbourne's funeral. / 26 Marilyn Manson and Rob Zombie at Ozzy Osbourne's funeral. / Other guests that were photographed included Marilyn Manson and his wife Lindsay Usich, White Zombie frontman Rob Zombie, Slipknot frontman Corey Taylor and his wife Alicia Dove, and Irish actor Stephen Rea. Ozzy's Black Sabbath bandmates, including Terence 'Geezer' Butler, Tony Iommi and Bill Ward, Metallica's James Hetfield, punk rocker Yungblud and Elton John were also said to be at the service. Around 110 people who attended the private ceremony were reportedly given a black invitation with a picture of a cross that read: 'In loving memory of Ozzy Osbourne,' according to The Sun. Security teams were on hand to ensure the safety of mourners at the funeral. 26 Guests at Ozzy Osbourne's funeral on July 31. / 26 Stephen Rea at Ozzy Osbourne's funeral. / 26 Marilyn Manson attended Ozzy Osbourne's funeral. / 'Everyone at the service just wanted to support Sharon and the kids, it has been an awful time,' insiders told the outlet. 'Toasts were raised, memories were shared – it was a very fitting goodbye,' they added, noting that a stage was set up outside the estate that Ozzy and Sharon purchased in 1993, with several famous musicians playing in tribute to the fallen rock icon. 'There was a stage where people including Yungblud, who grew very close to Ozzy in recent years, were set to pay tribute to him,' the source said. 26 Alicia Dove and Corey Taylor at Ozzy Osbourne's funeral. / 26 Rob Zombie at Ozzy Osbourne's funeral. / 26 Zakk Wylde at Ozzy Osbourne's funeral. / 'The day was incredibly emotional. Pictures of Ozzy were dotted throughout the house and a photograph of him was given to everyone who attended to take home with them.' A wreath with the words 'Ozzy f—ing Osbourne' was placed near his burial spot by the lake of his Buckinghamshire home. 'Ozzy wanted his final place of rest to be at home and he is buried at a beautiful point on the lake,' the source noted. 26 Footage from outside Ozzy Osbourne's funeral in Buckinghamshire. / 26 A sign outside Ozzy Osbourne's funeral service in Buckinghamshire. / 26 Floral tributes for Ozzy Osbourne. / On Wednesday, an emotional funeral procession took place through the streets of the late heavy metal icon's hometown in Birmingham, England. Thousands of Ozzy's fans flooded the city before the cortège officially kicked off at 1 p.m. local time, and they were joined by the 'Crazy Train' singer's grieving family. Ozzy's widow, Sharon, 72, and their kids, Kelly, Jack and Aimee, were seen dressed in black and wearing different items in honor of the late musician. 26 Fans gather at the Black Sabbath Bridge ahead of Ozzy Osbourne's private funeral on Wednesday. REUTERS 26 Sharon Osbourne and her kids give the peace sign to Ozzy Osbourne's fans after arriving at his funeral procession in Birmingham. News Licensing / MEGA 26 Ozzy Osbourne was laid to rest Wednesday. Shutterstock Louis Osbourne, whom Ozzy shared with his first wife, Thelma Riley, was also in attendance. After giving the peace sign to bystanders upon arriving at the farewell, the Osbournes laid purple flowers at a memorial filled with notes and gifts left behind by the 'Iron Man' singer's broken-hearted fans. Photos from the procession showed Sharon hugging Kelly and holding Jack's hands as she broke down in front of the memorial. 26 Jack, Sharon and Kelly Osbourne attend Ozzy Osbourne's funeral procession on July 30. Anadolu via Getty Images 26 Jack and Kelly Osbourne support their grieving mother, Sharon Osbourne, ahead of Ozzy's private funeral on Wednesday, July 30. 26 Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne's rarely seen daughter, Aimee, during her late father's funeral procession. Kelly was also seen hugging her fiancé, Sid Wilson, and their 2-year-old son, Sidney, while Sharon and Ozzy's rarely-seen daughter Aimee was photographed grieving alongside her loved ones. Sharon and the four of Ozzy's six children then followed close behind as a hearse carrying the Prince of Darkness' body drove down Birmingham's popular Broad Street and paused at the Black Sabbath Bench and Bridge. Ozzy's former Black Sabbath bandmates also attended the procession. 26 Ozzy Osbourne's loved ones gather at a memorial for the late Black Sabbath legend ahead of his private funeral. Joseph Walshe / SWNS 26 Thousands of fans gather for the late 'Crazy Train' singer's funeral procession in Birmingham, London, on Wednesday. REUTERS 26 Jack, Sharon and Kelly Osbourne view tributes to the late Ozzy Osbourne from fans as his funeral cortege travels through his hometown of Birmingham on July 30, 2025. Getty Images The 'Mama, I'm Coming Home' singer passed away 'surrounded by love' on Tuesday, July 22, at 76. He died following a long battle with Parkinson's disease and other health issues. 'It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning,' the Osbourne family said in a statement to The Post. 'He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time,' they added. 'Sharon, Jack, Kelly, Aimee, and Louis.' 26 Jack Osbourne greets fans ahead of his late father's private funeral. Getty Images 26 Kelly Osbourne hugs her fiancé, Sid Wilson. 26 The late heavy metal pioneer's loved ones gather at a memorial for Ozzy ahead of his private funeral. Following his death, a source close to Ozzy's family revealed how the Osbournes planned to honor the late 'Shot in the Dark' rocker. 'They're planning a small, private funeral that will be a celebration of his life,' an insider told People. 'Ozzy would never want a mope-fest.' 'They're very grateful for the special family time they had together before Ozzy passed,' the source added. Ozzy himself discussed his funeral plans years before his passing with The Times of London in 2011. 26 Thousands of fans gathered in Birmingham, London, Wednesday for Ozzy Osbourne's funeral procession. ADAM VAUGHAN/EPA/Shutterstock 26 Jack, Kelly, Sharon and Aimee Osbourne shortly before Ozzy's private funeral on Wednesday, July 30. 26 Ozzy Osbourne attends the MTV EMA's 2014. Getty Images for MTV 'I honestly don't care what they play at my funeral; they can put on a medley of Justin Bieber, Susan Boyle and We Are the Diddymen if it makes 'em happy,' he said at the time. 'But I do want to make sure it's a celebration, not a mope-fest.' 'I'd also like some pranks: maybe the sound of knocking inside the coffin; or a video of me asking my doctor for a second opinion on his diagnosis of 'death,'' Ozzy added. 'There'll be no harping on the bad times.'

Rose Leiman Goldemberg, 97, dies; her ‘Burning Bed' was a TV benchmark
Rose Leiman Goldemberg, 97, dies; her ‘Burning Bed' was a TV benchmark

Boston Globe

timea day ago

  • Boston Globe

Rose Leiman Goldemberg, 97, dies; her ‘Burning Bed' was a TV benchmark

Ms. Goldemberg was working as a playwright in the mid-1970s when she sent a few story outlines to an unusually receptive television producer. One of them, a drama about immigrants set on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in 1910, caught his interest. It became a television movie, 'The Land of Hope' (a title Ms. Goldemberg hated), which aired on CBS in 1976. It centered on a Jewish family and their Irish and Italian neighbors. There were labor organizers, gangsters, and musicians, and a rich uncle who wanted to adopt a child to say Kaddish for him when the time came. Such an ethnic stew was a stretch for the network, and critics loved it. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'A thoroughly charming surprise,' John O'Connor wrote in his review for The New York Times. Advertisement As a pilot for a series, 'The Land of Hope' went nowhere, but it made Ms. Goldemberg's reputation, and she began receiving stories to be turned into scripts. 'Where did you spring from?' one network executive asked her, she recalled in a 2011 interview for the nonprofit organization New York Women in Film & Television. 'As though I were a mushroom.' It was Arnold Shapiro, the veteran producer, writer and director behind 'Scared Straight!,' a well-received TV documentary about teenage delinquents being brought into contact with prison inmates, who sent Ms. Goldemberg 'The Burning Bed,' a 1980 book by The New Yorker writer Faith McNulty about the case of Francine Hughes. Advertisement Hughes's story was horrific. For 13 years, she had been terrorized by her alcoholic husband. One day in March 1977, after a brutal beating, she called the police in their Michigan town. Two officers responded and then left, saying there was nothing they could do because they hadn't witnessed the attacks. That night, the beating resumed, and Hughes's husband raped her. When he fell asleep, she doused the bed with gasoline, lit a match, and set the bed on fire. Then she put her children in the car and drove to the county jail to report what she had done. Her husband died that night, and Francine Hughes was charged with first-degree murder. Nine months later, a jury pronounced her not guilty by reason of temporary insanity. The verdict made national headlines. Fawcett, the pinup star of 'Charlie's Angels,' the frothy crime series, was already attached to the project; she had shown her dramatic chops in 'Extremities,' an off-Broadway production about a woman who exacts revenge on her rapist, and wanted to continue working in that vein. Yet the project was initially turned down by all three networks. When it was resurrected, by NBC, in one of those complicated scenarios particular to Hollywood, Shapiro was somehow left out of the production. The movie aired in October 1984, to mostly critical acclaim. (Paul Le Mat played the husband.) It was seen by tens of millions of viewers, and NBC's ratings soared, pulling the network out of third place and putting it on top for the first time in a decade. Fawcett, Ms. Goldemberg, the producers, and even the makeup artist were nominated for Emmy Awards, and the movie set off a national conversation about domestic abuse. Women's shelters, a rarity in those days, began opening all over the country; the film was shown in men's prisons; and Ms. Goldemberg was often asked to speak to women's groups. Advertisement Inevitably, as she recalled in 2011, 'someone would say, 'I couldn't talk about my own abuse until I saw the film.'' She added: 'It wasn't because of me. It was a wonderful performance by Farrah, and the timing was right. It was just a remarkable confluence of the right things happening at the right time.' Still, Ms. Goldemberg began fielding entreaties from other actresses who wanted her to write star vehicles for them, projects akin to 'The Burning Bed.' She did so for one of Fawcett's fellow angels, Jaclyn Smith, cowriting the TV movie 'Florence Nightingale' for her. Broadcast in April 1985, it did not have the same impact as 'The Burning Bed'; most critics found it soapy and forgettable. A Lucille Ball vehicle fared much better. Ball wanted a script about homelessness, and when she and Ms. Goldemberg met at her Beverly Hills house, Ball laid out her terms: She wanted to play a character with some of the personality traits of her grandmother, and named for her. Ms. Goldemberg came up with 'Stone Pillow,' a television film about a homeless woman named Florabelle. In his Times review, under the headline 'Lucille Ball Plays a Bag Lady on CBS,' O'Connor called the movie 'a carefully contrived concoction' but praised Ball 'as wily and irresistible as ever.' Advertisement Rose Marion Leiman was born on May 17, 1928, on Staten Island, N.Y. Her mother, Esther (Friedman) Leiman, oversaw the home until World War II, when she became an executive secretary at Bank of America; her father, Louis Leiman, owned a chain of dry-cleaning stores in New Jersey. Rose earned a bachelor's degree in 1949 from Brooklyn College, where she had enrolled at 16, and a Master of Arts in English from Ohio State University. She married Raymond Schiller, a composer who followed her from Brooklyn College to Ohio State, in 1949; he later became a computer systems designer. They divorced in 1968. Her marriage, in 1969, to Robert Goldemberg, a cosmetic chemist, ended in divorce in 1989. Her first television-related job was at TV Guide in the 1950s, writing reviews of shows airing on what was then a new medium. She eventually began writing plays. Ms. Goldemberg is survived by a son, Leiman Schiller, and three stepchildren, David Goldemberg, Kathy Holmes, and Sharanne Goldemberg. This article originally appeared in

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