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        <title><![CDATA[Irish pub bans singing Neil Diamond’s ‘Sweet Caroline’]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">Irish pub bans singing Neil Diamond’s ‘Sweet Caroline’</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Good times never seemed so sad.</p><p>In a cheeky effort to shed light on social-distancing rules, an Irish pub on Spain&#8217;s Canary Islands announced that Neil Diamond&#8217;s classic tune &#8220;Sweet Caroline&#8221; is officially banned from the watering hole.</p><p>&#8220;There will be no: touching hands, reaching out, touching me, touching you,&#8221; reads a chalkboard quoting the legendary hit song at Murphy&#8217;s Irish Bar in Corralejo.</p><p>Owner Linda Carroll <strong>posted a photo</strong> of the funny decree&nbsp;on Friday that&#8217;s since been shared hundreds of times.</p><p>&#8220;2020 claims another victim. RIP Sweet Caroline,&#8221; one <a href="https://twitter.com/holisternh/status/1290290918344388610" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">person</a> joked on Twitter.</p><p>But it&#8217;s not just the lyrics that make the 1969 ballad an easy target for COVID-19 quips: The song has a rich history of being belted out in unison by boozed-up patrons at gin mills, potentially triggering superspreading events.</p><p>&#8220;People can&#8217;t help but to sing the lyrics,&#8221; said Terence Haggerty, the owner of Staten Island&#8217;s longtime Irish joint Jody&#8217;s Club Forest. &#8220;The words are easy to remember, it&#8217;s fun and it definitely always brings a bar crowd together.&#8221;</p><p><fb:post href="https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=4903737292985686&#038;set=a.1030589553633832&#038;type=3" data-width="552" width="426" ></fb:post></p><p>Haggerty, 37, who inherited the West Brighton biz from his father, Jody, after he died, said his dad blasted the tune for his customers ever since he opened the pub in 1976.</p><p>&#8220;People like to go to a bar to mingle and meet new people,&#8221; said Haggerty, who still plays the ditty during celebrations. &#8220;With this song, people can put their arms around each other and just sing and be happy no matter what is going on in their lives.&#8221;</p><p>Bob McArthur, a local Neil Diamond impersonator of 20 years, explained that the singalong phenomenon is &#8220;by far&#8221; his most requested.</p><p>He added that fans especially love shouting the song, potentially unleashing virus-laden respiratory droplets.</p><p>&#8220;There&#8217;s usually a lot of projecting going on,&#8221; said McArthur, 52.</p><p>Also a sports-stadium staple, &#8220;Sweet Caroline&#8221; is used by teams like the Boston Red Sox, which has played it regularly at Fenway Park since 1997, and Charlotte&#8217;s NFL team, the Carolina Panthers, since 1996. The Panthers recently threw on the song at their empty Bank of America Stadium in honor of the pandemic&#8217;s front-line workers.</p><p>The song&#8217;s coronavirus connection wasn&#8217;t missed by the 79-year-old musical great himself, either. In March, Diamond <strong>released a rendition</strong> of the tune with a COVID-19 bent.</p><p>“Hands . . . Washing hands . . . Reaching out . . . Don’t touch me, I won’t touch you,&#8221; he sings in the YouTube clip that&#8217;s garnered more than 3.5 million views.</p><p>But there is one option for &#8220;Sweet Caroline&#8221; songbirds: &#8220;Just sing with a mask on,&#8221; said McArthur.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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