Bono attended Mount Temple Comprehensive School, a multi denominational school in Clontarf. During his childhood and adolescence, Bono and his friends were part of a surrealist street gang called "Lypton Village". The world will soon be introduced to Bono.
Bono is reviled by a fair number of people, too, and it's no mystery why. Even the most beloved rock star takes plenty of knocks from the inevitable ranks of detractors. But Bono is more than just a rock star. He's put himself forward as a humanitarian, a statesman even, according to the headline of a September cover story in The New York Times Magazine.
He's the most visible component of a wildly successful multinational business conglomerate (U2, that is), and he's been known to come off as, well, a bit self-righteous from time to time. (See: ``Rattle and Hum,'' the band's 1988 documentary.)
All of those things are fodder for people who think rock stars ought to keep quiet when they're not on stage singing, or who can't abide the outsized personalities that mega-stars seem to develop when they have incongruous access to world leaders, wear a perpetual layer of scruff and never appear without their annoying blue-tinted sunglasses.
Bono gives the impression of not worrying about any of that, and it makes him more effective in his various roles:
Rock star