Charles Doherty
2.7K posts


@GlamSlam72 @prodnose Chin And Champman manufactured Them to great success in the GlamRock era of the early 70s , made plenty out of it and also made Les Gray think he was Elvis Presley
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📅 April 8, 1974
Mud released the single “The Cat Crept In” on RAK Records.
A swaggering, hook-packed slice of Chinnichap glam-pop written and produced by Nicky Chinn & Mike Chapman, it followed their massive hits “Tiger Feet” and “Dyna-mite.” The stomping A-side was backed by the band’s own softer track “Morning.”
The single entered the UK chart at No. 8, peaked at No. 2, and spent nine weeks on the chart.
#Mud #TheCatCreptIn #ChinnChapman #GlamRock #OnThisDay #1974 #RAKRecords
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@Highland__paddy An absolute gem of an album, remember purchasing it at Dolphin Records in Dublin in 1984 ☘️💚
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@Selickpark Sorry Kenneth but Vickers and Jota are done I’d say
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@CELTlC67 @cfccfc1888 @reptracker You obviously have a personal beef about Kenny. He will be back next season , you need to accept that
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@cfccfc1888 @reptracker He’s worse than them, absolute fraud of a footballer. Hope he never plays for Celtic ever again, absolutely hopeless.
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@KirkMcalpin3 @albertsoo_ Cranky ? The man is an Ignoramous but makes great music
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My 23-year-old daughter was working a late shift at the grocery store last week when she texted me on her break, a little uneasy. She said a man had been following her through the aisles for about 20 minutes. She wasn’t sure if she was imagining it—but she wasn’t.
She went back to her register, and a few minutes later her coworker Miguel came and quietly stood at the end of her lane. He didn’t say anything, didn’t make a scene—he just stayed there. Then her supervisor, Deb, came over and said she needed help in the back. There wasn’t anything back there that needed help—but they both knew exactly why she was being pulled away.
When my daughter came back out, the man was gone.
She called me on her way home and told me what happened. It wasn’t until she was driving that it really hit her—Miguel had noticed. He told Deb. Deb got her out of sight. Other coworkers kept an eye on the man until he left. No panic, no embarrassment, no making her feel like she had done anything wrong. They just handled it. Quietly. Together.
I sat in my driveway and cried.
Because yes, I’ve raised her to be aware and trust her instincts—and she did. But what got her safely to her car that night wasn’t just her awareness. It was people who were paying attention. People who cared enough to step in.
I think about all the times I’ve worried about her working late. All the “text me when you get home” messages. All the quiet prayers I say.
And then I think about Miguel, just standing there, saying nothing—but being everything she needed in that moment.
I don’t think I have the words for what that means to a mother.
She’s back at work now—same store, same late shifts. I still say my prayers. But now I also know she’s not alone in that building. She’s surrounded by people who notice, who care, and who act.
I reached out to the store manager the next day to tell him what his team did. He said he wasn’t surprised—that’s just who they are.
And honestly, that made me cry all over again.
We hear so much about what’s wrong in the world. And yes, there’s plenty. But there are also people like Miguel, Deb, and that entire closing crew—people who look out for others like they’re their own.
From the bottom of my heart—thank you for seeing my daughter, for stepping in, and for being exactly the kind of people this world needs more of. 💚
Credit - Cecilia greene

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@MarkEglinton Dinny worry about their drop off . Our Drop off has came all across the season and equally shared by the three different managers we’ve had in charge & in all honesty we know for sure theres more points to be dropped in the next few weeks, so wouldn’t be too concerned about Well
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