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RTÉ admits paying Tubridy €345,000 more than declared

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  • Registered Users Posts: 4,914 ✭✭✭skimpydoo




  • Registered Users Posts: 13,620 ✭✭✭✭Goldengirl


    The new ad for TLLS with Patrick's owl head !


    (Apologies if posted already )



  • Registered Users Posts: 3,008 ✭✭✭RoTelly


    no in general. Not that that makes it any better.


    ______

    Just one more thing .... when did they return that car

    Yesterday



  • Registered Users Posts: 2,199 ✭✭✭artvanderlay


    Who's your money on for Tub's next photo op in London? Probably "the legend" Eamonn Holmes next, or else a man-sized Paddington Bear! Oh no, wait, he'll have to do the Abbey Road crossing, given that he is such a Beatlemaniac. Maybe Richard Osman, given that they are both bibliophiles and serious authors. Hmmmm, I'm all giddy with excitement. I won't sleep tonight wondering what shite awaits me in the Indo tomorrow!



  • Registered Users Posts: 53,028 ✭✭✭✭ButtersSuki




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  • Registered Users Posts: 122 ✭✭Orange-Coca-Cola


    No matter how it works out, the tax paid will likely be handed back to them as another bailout payment in the following month. For now anyway.

    He looks very similar to Dermot Bannon at the end there, but with less pointy ears. I hope we have seen and heard the last of DB on TLLS. I am not interested in what colour toilet paper his wife buys for their downstairs toilet, which is probably the only thing that he has left to talk about.

    Danny Baker or John Leslie.

    Surely the Abbey Road crossing is a definite.



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,380 ✭✭✭tom23


    Dermot Bannon. Now there’s a lad who’s stealing a living.



  • Registered Users Posts: 17,510 ✭✭✭✭fritzelly




  • Registered Users Posts: 552 ✭✭✭Baba Yaga


    rte are looking for how many millions?ffs...think the minister of communications should ring up bakhurst,conversation should go like this....

    minister 'how are you kevin,having a good day?listen,you know that xnumber of millions your looking for?yeah well do the letters F O mean anything to you?good to hear they do,thanks and have a fantastic day,bye now'


    "They gave me an impossible task,one which they said I wouldnt return from...."

    ps wheres my free,fancy rte flip-flops...?



  • Registered Users Posts: 15,627 ✭✭✭✭Beechwoodspark


    Watched a clip of RT on Chris Evans yest.

    He tried to name drop and impress with a story about Bono gifting him a scooter when he ran away from the LLS (as he knew the scandal was going to break).

    Chris Evans took over, talked over RT, told a far better Bono story directly to his producers, while RT desperately tried to get back into the conversation.

    Desperate, pathetic carry on from Tubridy.



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  • Registered Users Posts: 21,023 ✭✭✭✭Ash.J.Williams


    In an article many years ago he stated that tubs would be found out



  • Registered Users Posts: 13,385 ✭✭✭✭hotmail.com


    His Alan Partridge act won't pass in England anymore. For some reason he got away with it in Ireland.



  • Registered Users Posts: 155 ✭✭Terence Rattigan


    Another Desperate Puff Piece in the Times, hopefully it was actually AI generated, alleged deceit and impropriety, must be worried about getting sued.


    Ryan Tubridy may be ready to embrace Britain. But is Britain ready for him?The former RTÉ host’s cerebral, folksy manner ought to translate to British radio, home to Melvyn Bragg, Stephen Fry and Rory Stewart

    Eccentricity is a highly rewarded social trait in Britain: Tubridy ought to translate to British radio.

    Finn McRedmond

    Thu Sep 7 2023 - 06:30

    Ryan Tubridy – who will not be returning to RTÉ in the wake of this summer’s payment scandal – has been on a jaunt around London’s West End this week. All perfectly innocuous until Piers Morgan – the British firebrand journalist who walked out of his lucrative Good Morning Britain gig in a huff over Meghan Markle – posted a photo of Tubridy on X (neé Twitter).

    “The sacked presenter club!” Morgan wrote. “Great to see Ireland’s biggest TV star Ryan Tubridy in London today, and excited to see what he does next.” And with that, whatever vague rumours circulating about Tubridy’s potential move to the city gained a lot of momentum.

    After weeks of protracted press attention – and terrible amounts of pearl-clutching at all the alleged deceit and impropriety – perhaps the mood is changing. Just days ago Pat Kenny defended his former colleague on the front lines: the scandal was “an avoidable mess” and Tubridy has been “tarnished by RTÉ”, he said.

    Now that Tubridy is teasing a move across the Irish Sea, the realisation might dawn: RTÉ has lost an asset, but a good career likely awaits in Britain. That he might succeed in London media is not erroneous suspicion but a likelihood.

    But what, exactly, is the milieu that Tubridy might be walking into? There has been plenty of hand-wringing over the doomed fate of so-called old media – print newspapers and magazines, traditional 6pm news broadcasts, all manner of radio. But UK radio listening remains remarkably high, with 89 per cent of the population tuning in at least once a week. We might like to think of the radio as uniquely dominant in Irish life, but the comparative listenership figures hardly differ. Even as the spectre of the podcast looms, reports of radio’s imminent death have been vastly exaggerated.

    Without the shackles of Montrose smugness, perhaps Tubridy can be more himself

    In television, two new outlets are seeking to disrupt the traditional conservatism of British broadcasting. GB News (boasting modest ratings) and Rupert Murdoch’s Talk TV (boasting less than modest ratings) both lean right, are comfortable with the shock-jock school of presenting, and take inspiration from their American counterparts. It is easy to look from afar and baulk at the slow Fox-News-ification of Britain’s media, but that is not exactly what’s happening. Britain is not America. The channels are minor-interest at most. And the BBC – which at once provokes more ire and generates more adoration than RTÉ – is a good stabilising force.


    Tubridy’s hypothetical move would make him no anomaly. Plenty of Irish stars have made their mark on British airwaves. Limerick man Terry Wogan may be the pioneer, but Clondalkin-born Graham Norton is a national treasure in England too. Craig Doyle and Laura Whitmore are mainstays on the screen. With perhaps the exception of Wogan, this genre of Irish-cum-Anglo broadcaster are typified by their clean, mid-Atlantic style. Perhaps some even supplicate their Irishness to appeal to a broad church of British viewers. Accent aside, Norton would hardly seem out of place on the American late-night talkshow circuit.

    The opposite is true of Tubridy. Eccentricity is a highly rewarded social trait in Britain: think about former Tory MP and co-host of the wildly popular The Rest Is Politics podcast Rory Stewart, or the doyens of BBC Radio 4 Melvyn Bragg, Stephen Fry, Elton John and – yes – Boris Johnson. Tubridy – wordy, eager, cerebral, folksy – ought to translate to British radio as these men do. The source of their appeal lies precisely in their esotericism. And now without the shackles of Montrose smugness, perhaps Tubridy can be more himself.

    So Tubridy ought not suppress his Irishness. But there is an inverse danger: it is easy to fall into a classic trap of Anglo-Irish antagonism, to exaggerate the cultural differences between the English and Irish, to allow historical enmity to colour all interactions. It is true that the British media in the wake of Brexit was not particularly well disposed to Ireland (though we are no saints either). But this is not the character of the British media writ large. And more than that, this cultural antagonism is rarely of interest to people who live here in the UK. Wogan never indulged, nor does Norton. Irish people living normal lives – my cousin who has just moved to Clapham, my oldest schoolfriend who now lives in Hackney – pay little heed either.

    Good media relies on authenticity and any foreign-born host needs to strike a careful balance: to be careful not to adapt so much they come to sound like an institutionalised BBC host 25 years into their tenure, but to assimilate enough, to understand who you are speaking to. But the key to London is that it is a city of immigrants. If the move happens then Tubridy will be charting a well-worn course. Not just after Wogan and Norton. But the writer behind Bad Sisters, Sharon Horgan. Meath restaurateur Richard Corrigan has just opened a new venture on the roof of the National Portrait Gallery. London has long been a natural host for Irish talent.



  • Registered Users Posts: 3,202 ✭✭✭yagan


    That Irish Times fluff piece is another affirmation tick for cancelling my subscription to what is essentially a south country Dublin social pages.



  • Registered Users Posts: 12,493 ✭✭✭✭mariaalice


    How is this still a thread? RT will pop up somewhere, move on.



  • Registered Users Posts: 3,008 ✭✭✭RoTelly


    Finn McRedmond, Next DG of RTÉ!

    David's Daughter.


    ______

    Just one more thing .... when did they return that car

    Yesterday



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,262 ✭✭✭Schorpio


    In television, two new outlets are seeking to disrupt the traditional conservatism of British broadcasting. GB News (boasting modest ratings) and Rupert Murdoch’s Talk TV (boasting less than modest ratings) both lean right, are comfortable with the shock-jock school of presenting, and take inspiration from their American counterparts. It is easy to look from afar and baulk at the slow Fox-News-ification of Britain’s media, but that is not exactly what’s happening. Britain is not America. The channels are minor-interest at most. And the BBC – which at once provokes more ire and generates more adoration than RTÉ – is a good stabilising force.

    This paragraph right here tells you everything you need to know about the article.

    Trying to downplay the potential damaging impacts of GBeebies and TalkTV, just becasue they aren't large and "Britain is not America". Let's conveniently ignore the fact that they are bankrolled by billionaires with a storied-history of seriously meddling with the UK (Brexit, etc.) and said billionaires have a vested interest in growing the channels.

    Also, they don't "lean right". They are firmly on the right. You don't employ the likes of Farrage, Rees-Moog, Wootton, and Morgan if you're trying to capture the middle ground. And neither channel has any counter left-wing presence (unlike LBC, where they had Farrage, but also O'Brien).

    This is nothing but a softening piece, and points a but further to Tubs making a move to GBeebies or TalkTV.



  • Registered Users Posts: 9,024 ✭✭✭Gregor Samsa


    That's not really accurate.

    Here's the interview from 2010 in Hot Press. At the time it was reported (in the Indo, etc) as Dempsey "having a go" at Tubridy. In some people's heads, that seems to have morphed into him hating him or dismissing him.

    The reality of what his said was much more mundane (the context was Tubridy move to the 2fm breakfast slot, in competition with Dempsey's):

    HP: Will Tubridy be a good replacement?


    ID: Ryan’s had Morning Ireland, handing him a huge audience, he’s been leading up to another huge audience from Pat Kenny, so he’s been kind of cushioned. Now he’s exposed. He did the breakfast show before and he was the only one that really threatened us. But I think he was very fresh at the time and people were saying, “Hey, who’s this guy?” Whereas now he’s an established part of the institution that is RTÉ. Again, I go back to the back-up thing. Ryan’s able to carry it, he’s a total professional, but he has to have the people behind him to come up with the ideas, and keep the show fresh.




  • Registered Users Posts: 7,410 ✭✭✭jmcc


    The longer Tubridy is unemployed, the more foolish those of his media friends are going to look. When they realise, in some rare moments of introspection, that they've been made to look foolish, they will turn on him. It is interesting that nobody in RTE seems to be mentioned as supporting him in these puff pieces.

    Tubridy seems quote irrelevant in the UK and it showed in the way that the Chris Evans video clip was promoted as being about Evans and Bono rather than him and Tubridy. The difference is that people in the UK have heard of Bono.The story was also funnier than Tubridy's self-aggrandising waffle about his red scooter.

    Regards...jmcc



  • Registered Users Posts: 21,023 ✭✭✭✭Ash.J.Williams




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  • Registered Users Posts: 21,023 ✭✭✭✭Ash.J.Williams


    I was not talking about hot press which makes this a bit silly



  • Registered Users Posts: 7,410 ✭✭✭jmcc


    "Ryan Tubridy may be ready to embrace Britain. But is Britain ready for him?The former RTÉ host’s cerebral, folksy manner ought to translate to British radio, home to Melvyn Bragg, Stephen Fry and Rory Stewart"

    Somehow, I don't think that Tubridy is intellectually in the same category as those three.

    Regards...jmcc



  • Registered Users Posts: 5,999 ✭✭✭Oscar_Madison


    I guess if you were full time in RTÉ you have your eye on your pay packet and future pay packets - any high profile “friend” currently employed by RTÉ or reliant on an income via RTÉ would be mad to say anything controversial right now about the situation - it would be seen as throwing petrol on the fire. Even just supporting him wouldn’t be looked on kindly.

    In terms of UK, if you look at the BBC earnings list, they don’t publish earnings less than £180k or thereabouts- so that’s actually more when converted to euro, than Tubridy was offered recently- I don’t think he’s going to get a high profile radio slot full time but he might get a regional bbc station and earn similar money to what he made in Ireland- if he gets that “break” then it’s really down to him and the British public as to whether he can climb up the uk ladder



  • Registered Users Posts: 3,008 ✭✭✭RoTelly


    You also have to remember that these News/talk Opinion channels to either the left or the right are not places that Tubs can go. I keep saying he has no opinion, he might wing it on CNN or MSNBC but even then he's no Rachel Maddow or Anderson Cooper.


    ______

    Just one more thing .... when did they return that car

    Yesterday



  • Registered Users Posts: 16,474 ✭✭✭✭Loafing Oaf


    But if Tubridy was a complete nobody in Britain would guys like Morgan and Evans be meeting up with him and tweeting complimentary stuff? Even if all that amounts to is personal affection and respect from those two individuals, that's not nothing in the media industry.



  • Registered Users Posts: 15,348 ✭✭✭✭AndyBoBandy


    The funniest bit of that whole monologue I thought was after Tubridy name dropped getting a Vespa from U2. Chris Evans retorted with a story about how him and Bono used an inflatable dinghy in France to approach a U.S. Naval warship in the dead of night looking for a bottle of Brandy.....


    Tubridy had thought he's just scored a last minute winner by name dropping U2, only for Evans to pop up with 2 goals in injury time to win it with his story of high seas escapades with Bono and the U.S. Navy

    Post edited by AndyBoBandy on


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,778 ✭✭✭Sunny Disposition


    Maybe I'm going to get slated again, but I think Finn McRedmond writes excellent, balanced opinion pieces. I'd see her as the best that the IT have for that kind of thing, far ahead of more celebrated people like Fintan O'Toole, Una Mullally or Jennifer O'Connell. Finn doesn't let her writing be clouded by emotion like some of the others.



  • Registered Users Posts: 7,410 ✭✭✭jmcc


    Not sure that the BBC would be interested in Tubridy's party piece of losing audiences. Even a regional radio slot might not work. He really has no intellectual depth when it comes to presenting Arts programmes and it would be difficult to think of him presenting The South Bank Show. He has no history in the UK media scene so that would involve a broadcaster spending money promoting him and his brand.

    The staff in RTE seemed very pissed off when the Tubridy payments story broke as they were the ones takng the pay cuts. The lack of support for Tubridy from those inside RTE or reliant on income from RTE was apparent. Given the dire financial situation in RTE (for the staff rather than the management), supporting Tubridy would have put people on the wrong side.

    Regards...jmcc



  • Registered Users Posts: 7,410 ✭✭✭jmcc


    In real terms, Tubridy fills dead air between the news and the adverts. A few minutes on Evans' show is not a major appearance. I think it was only a selfie with Morgan.

    Regards...jmcc



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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,225 ✭✭✭black & white


    Not slating you but as a sixty something IT subscriber I was surprised how young she is as her stuff reads like she's been part of the media/politics cosy club for 40 years.



This discussion has been closed.
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