Recently, 25 years of relative peace were celebrated in Northern Ireland, but recent events also show that it’s fragile, and there are legacies that linger and threaten to disturb it. A minority won’t let go of a Troubles frame of mind, but I’d suspect most want to move on to a time when sectarianism fades…
Category: TV & Radio
A sliver of hope or more of the same…
If there are two sides in a controversy I prefer to hear a discussion between two representatives. When it’s just one at a time being interviewed the presenter may not be informed or willing enough to ask the hard questions of both sides. On The Pat Kenny Show (Newstalk, Wednesday) Michael Fitzmaurice TD, Independent, and…
I wasn’t impressed by ‘the Joe Show’
I’m frequently uneasy about the whole Irish-American thing, but I do realise how welcoming the USA has been to the Irish, and how well they effectively protected us during World War II. The crucial US contribution to the Irish peace process must be acknowledged also. I wasn’t that interested in following the extensive coverage of…
Blessed are the peacemakers of the Good Friday Agreement
‘Blessed are the peacemakers’. This Beatitude seemed to underpin the coverage of the Good Friday Agreement anniversary last week. It hasn’t been 25 years of perfect peace but it has been infinitely better than the Troubles that went before. The event was marked in a prayerful way by the Service for the 25th Anniversary of…
Embracing the rollercoaster of Holy Week
Palm Sunday is a strange kind of day – celebrating the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem, but with the cloud of impending events looming over. It’s the emotional rollercoaster of Holy Week, but with the sure knowledge and hope of the Resurrection. On the Mass for Palm Sunday (RTÉ One) I liked the homily of…
Going the extra mile to make a difference
RTÉ sure knows how to make excellent one-off documentaries – last week we had a good one! In the Name of the Son (RTÉ One, Thursday) was the aptly-named story of Mags Riordan from Dingle. She had suffered the loss of three of her children – a baby that didn’t survive an accident that saw…
Media revels in self-congratulation for shiny new Ireland
St Patrick’s Day has become more of a secular celebration than a religious one. The ‘St’ is often dropped and the horrible ‘Paddy’s Day’ has accelerated the process. And yet the spiritual side has co-existed, happily or uneasily. It’s always open to Christians to celebrate the spiritual side and ensure that in their families due…
Mixed reaction to when people are ‘cancelled’
What’s that I was hearing about Macho of the Day? Oh wait, it was about Match of the Day on BBC One, and the odd controversy (provisionally resolved by Monday) about who should present it. On Times Radio Breakfast last Saturday morning Hugo Rifkind, on board to plug his own show for later that morning,…
Childishly trying to push boundaries
The trailers for the new comic drama series The Dry (RTÉ One, Wednesdays) looked promising as were the first few minutes, with recovering alcoholic Shiv trying to engage in conversation with a guy in the airport drinking morning pints. But he accused her of being “an f——religious nut”. Then they launched into a shouting match…
When pro-choice is not very pro-choice
There is much debate about single-sex schools versus mixed schools, with our current arrangements favouring choice and diversity of school models. I listened with interest to the discussion on Drivetime (RTÉ Radio One, Wednesday) when Aodhán Ó Ríordáin TD (Labour) was very much against single-sex schools. His view was based on equality arguments, but presenter…

Brendan O’Regan









