Paddy O Brian May 2026
So here’s to Paddy O’Brian — the rogue, the listener, the man who knew that the best stories are the ones left a little unfinished. If you ever find yourself in a pub and hear a quiet laugh from a corner table, lift your glass. He might still be there, in the gaps.
He’d been a sailor, a bricklayer, a horse trainer, and for two strange years in the 1980s, a DJ on a pirate radio station off the coast of Cork. None of it had made him rich. All of it had made him interesting . He claimed to have once talked a customs officer out of searching his van by reciting the first three verses of “The Ragman’s Ball” — and the officer had ended up buying him breakfast. Paddy O Brian
He never married, but he was never alone. Women loved him for his gentleness; men loved him because he never tried to win. He’d settle an argument with a shrug and a grin — “Ah, you could be right. Wouldn’t it be terrible if you were?” — and somehow the fight dissolved into another round. So here’s to Paddy O’Brian — the rogue,