![]() ![]() BuildRoot/Library/Caches//Sources/AppleFSCompression/AppleFSCompression-96.200.3/Common/ChunkCompression.cpp:49: Error: unsupported compressor 8 ![]() BuildRoot/Library/Caches//Sources/AppleFSCompression/AppleFSCompression-96.200.3/Libraries/CompressData/CompressData.c:353: Error: Unknown compression scheme encountered for file '/System/Library/CoreServices/CoreTypes.bundle/Contents/Resources/ist' `/BuildRoot/Library/Caches//Sources/AppleFSCompression/AppleFSCompression-96.200.3/Common/ChunkCompression.cpp:49: Error: unsupported compressor 8 When I run from the shell on Mojave I see the following error messages which may be quite telling. It has gotten as far as the dialog asking where the opml.root database is, but it won't let me choose the location that contains the. I have tried "all the tricks" to get OPML to run on Mojave. The last time I actually ran the application appears to be 2013. NB I have a copy of OPML on my 10.12 machine. A public house that’s queer and Irish is probably one of the best places for that.Can't get the download to work on any of my Macs - 10.12, 10.13, or 10.14 “I don’t want division, I want connections. “It’s a really lovely thing, to give people ownership of the space.” he says. At their best, both offer a place where you can come as you are without judgment and find community. In Donohoe’s view, the heart of an authentic Irish pub is complementary to the philosophy of queer spaces. “If I see anybody put a glass down, pull the tab, and walk away as it fills up, I’ll cry,” says Donohoe. Most of the drinks at Mary’s are under $10 - an effort to keep everything accessible - and the first thing any bartender learns is how to properly pour a pint of Guinness: at an angle, wait, top it off, no bubbles. In time, the décor will favor memorabilia and artwork from Ireland that are focused on queer narratives, along with plans to host a trad-music night before summer begins. The sprinkling of high-tops that fill in the space point to a pub philosophy instilled by Donohoe’s father: Low tables create distance, but when seats rise to bar height, it’s easier to entertain conversation with anyone who might be passing by carrying their next round. “I don’t think that there’s that many places for people who are the quieter side of queer.” There is no sawdust, but the floors are worn down enough to feel homey. “This is not necessarily a place for all the loud people,” says Donohoe. ![]() On a recent rainy Sunday night, groups of twos and fours trickled through the heavy wooden doors, dumping their umbrellas before getting settled. “My highest hope is that as a pub that is queer, it doesn’t need to be identified as a ‘lesbian bar,’ ‘gay bar,’ or anything in between.” You come as you are, and you’re welcomed,” he says. Donohoe wants to offer a traditional Irish sense of warmth in a space that is centered to queer people: “In a proper Irish pub, there is a general expectation of respect and inclusion in the community. Mary’s, which Donohoe named after his mother, is at its core another Irish pub, but it’s modeled after Dublin’s public houses, so midtown staples like TVs tuned to ESPN are nowhere to be found. Now he’s left his other job as CEO to work full-time on Ginger’s and a new project, Mary’s Bar, which opened the other week on the border of Greenpoint and East Williamsburg. “In a very good way, I feel like a steward.” “You’re preserving something that’s already done well,” Donohoe says. I just didn’t mold well to it.” He became involved with the lesbian bar Ginger’s in 2021, partnering with its founder, Sheila Frayne, after the Park Slope institution shuttered during the pandemic. “I didn’t recognize myself in that environment,” he says. In 2019, Donohoe, who is gay, joined a company that managed a dozen bars, mostly in midtown - but it wasn’t a great fit. ![]() Mary’s has been open for just a few weeks, but strong word of mouth has already brought in a crowd.Īfter Brendan Donohoe moved from Dublin to New York in 2006, he found a hospitality career that attracted many of his fellow expats: as a bartender at an Irish pub. ![]()
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