Last night’s RTE News.
Shane O’Connor writes:
RTÉ’s attention to detail is sorely lacking…
This evening.
Barnardo Square, Dame Street, Dublin 2.
A Rainbow vigil in memory of those killed in the massacre at a predominately gay nighclub in Orlando, Florida in the early hours of Saturday morning. A Book of Condolonce has been opened at the Mansion House, Dawson Street, Dublin 2 [10am-5pm] in support of LGBT community.
Pics: Buzz O Neill Maxwell, Rollingnews.
Earlier: Strong Pulse
This evening.
Dame Lane, Dublin 2
Thanks Colin
Meanwhile…
So far Ireland-Sweden looks as if Zlatan has accidentally wandered into an English lower-division football match in 1993 #IRLSWE
— Simon Kuper (@KuperSimon) June 13, 2016
Oh.
UPDATE:
What a moment! #COYBIG pic.twitter.com/KAEoi3m58m
— FAIreland (@FAIreland) June 13, 2016
Hoolahan 1- Sweden 0
Update:
Ireland’s Clark!
For – aargh – Sweden.
Final score: Ireland 1 Sweden 1
Ryan Tubridy, on The Late Late Show
Further to an article in yesterday’s Irish Mail on Sunday in which it was reported that an unnamed source claimed The Late Late Show is in “need of a revamp” on foot of poor figures for the most recent season…
RTÉ has released the following statement…
RTÉ One categorically rejects any suggestion that The Late Late Show is in need of a revamp.
RTÉ One channel controller Adrian Lynch said: “This has been an extremely successful year for The Late Late Show. It has bucked wider television trends to increase its audience share, maintaining its position as Ireland’s biggest TV show.
“Any suggestion that the show is in need of a revamp is ridiculous. This is a programme that continues to draw the biggest weekly audiences on Irish television and regularly provides the talking point of the weekend for people around the country. We are very happy with how the show has performed over the last year. Any broadcaster would be delighted to have a show like The Late Late Show as their flagship programme, consistently delivering week on week”.
The consolidated* average audience for the 2015/16 series of The Late Late Show was 583,300 and the average share** of the available audience was 42.1 per cent. This compares to a consolidated average of 599,900 for the 2014/15 series and a share of 41.6 per cent.
While there has been a extremely modest drop in terms of the thousands watching, The Late Late Show confounded industry trends this year and actually increased its share of the available audience watching television at the time.
Adrian Lynch said: “The Late Late Show is a winning formula that viewers continue to embrace wholeheartedly, as clearly demonstrated by the fact that this year the show has increased its share of the available audience. This is a significant feat at a time when viewers can choose from more television channels than ever before and one that the Late Late team should be very proud of”.
Viewers are also watching the show on a wider variety of platforms including RTÉ One +1, RTÉ Player and On Demand.
There was an increase in the average number of people watching the show on RTÉ One + 1 this year (up to 17,100 Live+VOSDAL*** in 2015/16 from 13,000 in 2014/15).
The show is also doing exceptionally well on RTÉ Player with total streams of 1,735,700 for this season, a 9 per cent increase in streams on the previous season (Sept 2014 – May 2015).
FIGHT!
Ratings Source: TAM Ireland Ltd / Nielsen TAM
*Average consolidated audience – consolidated data incorporates VCR, DVDR and PVR playback viewing that took place within 7 days of the original broadcast. This time-shifted viewing is added to the live data to produce consolidated viewing data. Consolidated data is available eight days after the original transmission date. This data is the ‘TAM Gold Standard’ used by the industry to report and trade on.
**Share – The percentage of the total audience watching television at the time
***Live+VOSDAL – Live + Viewed On Same Day As Live – average reflects the average number of viewers across a programme or series, expressed in 000s. TV viewing is measured minute-by-minute, so the average audience is the average across all of these minutes
Thanks Gareth
#IRL fan gets NAKED on top of a passing van. Fans love it. #COYBIG pic.twitter.com/VmqZ0UTmW9
— Thatsagoal (@thatsagoal) June 13, 2016
Yikes.
Irish fan disrobes…hilarity ensues.
Meanwhile…
Controlled explosions outside the Stade de France #homefromhome #COYBIG
— Fra (@FrancisMcShane) June 13, 2016
Controlled explosion performed outside Stade de France ahead of Euro 2016 match (RT)
Meanwhile,
G’wan Wes.
Via FAI Ireland
How could you have banned a US citizen born in NYC? @realDonaldTrump
— Derek Mooney (@dsmooney) June 12, 2016
From top: Donald Trump; Derek Mooney; Twitter spat.
Tragedy brings the worst out of Donald Trump and his supporters.
Derek Mooney writes:
When faced with a massive tragedy the natural inclination of most democratic political leaders, from across the spectrum, is to put partisan politics aside for a time and stand together in solidarity and grief.
Campaigns are put on hiatus, genuine political differences are temporarily put aside while the country mourns and tries to cope with the enormity of what has befallen it.
It is what happened in the wake of recent terrorist attacks in France and in Belgium and countless times in the USA in the aftermath of yet another mass slaying of innocent victims.
Yet, last night, even before the names and details of the 50 men and women callously slaughtered in the Pulse Nightclub in Orlanda had been released, the Republican Party’s presumptive candidate for the US Presidency chose to take the other route, going was online to whip up anger and score political points off the worst instance of US domestic terrorism.
Within minutes of the news emerging, Trump took to Twitter to express his commiserations and grief saying: “Horrific incident in FL. Praying for all the victims & their families. When will this stop?”. He was expressing a sentiment shared by countless millions learning the news of the horrific homophobic attack.
But Trump could not leave it there. Within the hour he was back to acknowledge the messages he had received from his supporters. Now his focus was not on the yet unidentified Orlando victims and their families: he was shifting it back on him.
His tweet began: “Appreciate the congrats for being right on radical Islamic terrorism…”. One hour out of the spotlight was too much for him to handle. Donald the Ego was back. His descent deep into the quagmire continued, actually it worsened, shortly after President Obama went on TV to express the grief and outrage of the American people.
Where President Obama sought to be measured calm and reassuring, Trump was reaching for the dog whistle both on twitter and in an intemperate statement calling for Obama’s resignation.
On Twitter he said: “What has happened in Orlando is just the beginning. Our leadership is weak and ineffective. I called it and asked for the ban…”
I responded to him on Twitter pointing out that a ban on Muslim immigrants would not have stopped the Orlando attack as the reported perpetrator was a US citizen, born in New York city.
Within minutes Trump’s online supporters were attacking me from all sides. Apart from their collective abhorrence of the prospect of more gun control, their arguments and rebuttals flatly contradicted each other.
Some said that I was missing the point and that an immigration ban would have stopped the killer’s parents from immigrating (though they were somewhat sketchy on how a ban imposed in 2017 could be backdated to prevent them entering 30+ years ago).
Others, the more hard-line ones, said that Trump would not just introduce a temporary ban on Islamic immigrants, but that he was in favour of banning Muslims – full stop.
Some of these talked about how they could set up internment camps like (according to one deluded soul) those set up in WW2 or perhaps, even, deport them.
Another smaller set of Trump supporters, identifying themselves as immigrants for Trump, harangued me saying that it was me who was implying that all Islamic immigrants were terrorists and that Mr Trump had never said that.
It was hard not to be struck by the glaring inconsistencies and absolute contradictions between these most steadfast and passionate of Trump advocates and to reflect on how it is not the detail of what Trump says, but its vagueness and hollowness that attracts them.
He presents them with a blank platform upon which they can unload their own prejudices, grievances and bigotry without reference to what their fellow Trump supporters say or think.
While ugliness and confusion of these yelped Twitter responses can possibly be explained by the anger, ignorance and frustration of those involved, no such excuse can be applied to the man who lets loose this anger by, in the guise of leadership, blowing the dog whistle on this tragedy.
One of the reasons political leaders come together in the face of crisis or attack, be it internal or external, is that there know that there is strength in unity. They know the importance of being strong in the face of attack and signalling that there is more that unites us, than divides us.
Trump took the opposite course last night. In comments that might have been viewed, in days gone by, as treasonous and unpatriotic, Trump went well beyond usual partisan politics and dismissed America’s leadership as weak and ineffectual. He as good as said that the terrorists are winning.
How can you ever hope to make “America great again” by publicly talking it down in the wake of an attack?
Prof Simon Schama’s Tweet in the midst of the anger and turmoil last night summed it up best: “…we have a cultural civil war now in USA”.
Derek Mooney is a communications and public affairs consultant. He previously served as a Ministerial Adviser to the Fianna Fáil led government 2004 – 2010. Follow Derek on Twitter: @dsmooney
Pic: Getty
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GqfXCZLxUuQ
Further to the O’Higgins’ Inquiry into Sgt Maurice McCabe’s allegations of malpractice…
Garda Commissioner Nóirín O’Sullivan is appearing before the Policing Authority at the King’s Inns, Dublin 7 NOW.
You may recall how, during the O’Higgins’ Commission of Investigation into Sgt McCabe’s allegations, Colm Smyth, SC, initially told Judge Kevin O’Higgins that, on behalf of Ms O’Sullivan, his instructions were to “challenge the integrity of Sgt McCabe and his motivation”.
This was based on a meeting in Mullingar between Sgt McCabe and two gardaí.
Several months later, on the day Commissioner O’Sullivan was due to give evidence – by which time Sgt McCabe had produced a transcript of his meeting in Mullingar with two gardaí – Mr Smyth told Judge O’Higgins: “The position now is that his motive is under attack, credibility is under attack from the Commissioner. But not his integrity.”
Watch Ms O’Sullivan’s appearance live in the video link above