I have to confess I was reasonably impressed with some of the musical competency on display. As for the poetry, well, let's just say that it wasn't to my particular taste. Dáithí Ó Sé did as good a job as any of his illustrious predecessors and seemed genuinely at ease in his role as host. No better man for a bit of harmless banter with the ladies.
But within one hour of this great big Kerry love-in, I could take no more and left the room while my sanity was still relatively intact. I was gutted when I learnt that this was only the first night of the competition and we would be doing it all over again the next day. It was like a being trapped in your own version of 'Groundhog Day' with big gúnas, tin whistles and a twinkly-eyed presenter who could collectively charm all the mammies of Ireland.
•Ryan Tubridy is not responsible for the flaws of 'The Late Late Show' |
In a cruel twist of fate, the following morning I received a final demand for my TV licence fee. Not the best time to be reminded that my hard-earned €160 is helping to fund the State broadcaster's original output.
But in fairness, the beauty/talent/nice personality pageant in the Kingdom is only a small part of what RTÉ has to offer. The station recently revealed its autumn schedule, with highlights including another season of the acclaimed 'Love/Hate', as well as a drama on the life of the flawed politician Charles Haughey.
The fact that some of the same actors will be appearing in both productions is a little bit worrying and smacks of laziness. I find it hard to believe that there is such a small pool of talent in this country that we are forced to wheel out the same faces time and time again.
Naturally, 'The Late Late Show' will again take its place at the top of the table when it comes to the autumn/winter schedule. The station's flagship chat show has been in decline for some time and it's not the fault of genial host Ryan Tubridy. For starters, it's far too long. This may not have been a problem when we were living in five channel land but in an era of digital TV and Netflix, RTÉ needs to realise that the viewer has a shorter attention span than in days of yore and wants instant gratification.
In recent years 'The Late Late' has largely become a vehicle for promoting the station's other programmes or plugging some Z-lister's book. As for the musical content, let's just say that a Garth Brooks cover band was a particular low point in the last season for me personally. Tubridy has great empathy with the guests that have harrowing, human stories to tell but seems to struggle with the more lowbrow stuff concerning has-been soap actors or reality TV stars. And who could blame him for that? At least give the guy something he can work with.
RTÉ should shave at least an hour off 'The Late Late Show' and concentrate on attracting a higher calibre of guest if it wants the nation to stop flicking over to Graham Norton at the earliest opportunity. It will take far more than a fresh redesign of the show's set to reverse the rot.
There is still much to love about RTÉ. Its current affairs output - on television, radio and online - has yet to be matched by its competitors, although the excellent Newstalk is nipping at the broadcaster's heels in this regard. But with the impending launch of UTV Ireland and the station's acquisition of prize bull Pat Kenny, the media landscape is set for radical change in 2015.
RTÉ will still be able to compete for lucrative advertising while enjoying a financial top-up from the TV licence fee. But now, with more choice for the viewer than ever, it needs to prove that it's worthy of it.
I don't think RTÉ need to prove they deserve a licence fee. I think we need to have a fully funded public service broadcaster in an Ireland under FG / Labour where they continue to fail in the implementation of legislation on cross media ownership.
ReplyDeleteRather than asking RTÉ to prove they deserve the Licence fee they get, they should be better scrutinised by the audience. TV & Radio by a public service broadcaster should not be adjudicated by viewership/listenership numbers alone.
You rightly point out the flaws in some flagship light entertainment but for me RTÉ does not need to prove it deserves the licence fee. RTÉ as public service broadcaster (not the same as Newstalk or Today FM making 'public service media' funded by same licence Fee under sound & vision from BAI) need to be fully accountable to the Oireachtas Public Accounts on money in & out of the organisation and to the audience as citizens not media consumers, I some how doubt that the defunct audience council way is going to be enough of a watchdog in Montrose.
2015 will be interesting as Sky (not quite Ireland) continue to focus on Irish audiences of Sky One while €0.5bn Sky subscriptions leave the country without a dish tax. UTV come South. And The Home Broadcasting Tax makes advancements to eat the licence fee while cross media ownership laws stay hidden is a Fine Gael cupboard for a little while longer.
RTÉ need to deserve the licence fee, but we need to get an RTÉ that is responsive to the public that fund it in a manner that is in keeping with the fast moving technological times we live in.
There is more than one reason why Ryan Tubridy left Twitter three years ago.
The public bites back. As citizens with rights not consumers with rights of media we purchase by subscription.