The Late Late show

Started by T O Hare, January 30, 2009, 01:50:33 PM

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dodo

Saw this earlier and could not believe the effort Prat and RTE went into making the cnuts welcome and to try and normalise them to the watching public. It was like airbrushing over the reason for the evil one's infamy and having a cosy little chat. It was an embarrassment to watch it and an abuse of a position of influence.

Galwaybhoy

The chat about the cinema really annoyed me.  I'm not sure what people were expecting, but it was obvious Kenny would never ask the hard questions, he never does.  He is terrible.

To be honest I didn't want him to tear Paisley apart, if it was during the troubles and Paisley was in hes old routine of hatred then yes but not now.  Saying that I would have liked if he asked him some more important questions about some of the things he got up to in the past, get him to explain some of the awful things he has done rather than talking about going to see films in the cinema!

If they got rid of Pat they couldn't get in anybody worse.  I remember about a year or two ago Evander Holyfield was on, and as a boxing fan I was expecting Pat to ask him some serious questions about hes career and talk to him about why on earth he would continue to fight at hes age but for half the interview Pat only wanted to talk about Mike Tyson!  I'd do a better job myself...

fred the red

i would have loved to have seen dunphy interview him

red hander

Quote from: fred the red on January 31, 2009, 11:01:30 AM
i would have loved to have seen dunphy interview him

Nah, Dunphy would have given him a rim job too ... the single man more responsible for the Troubles than anyone else and we're treated to this vomit-inducing love-in

magickingdom

Quote from: dodo on January 31, 2009, 01:33:07 AM
Saw this earlier and could not believe the effort Prat and RTE went into making the cnuts welcome and to try and normalise them to the watching public. It was like airbrushing over the reason for the evil one's infamy and having a cosy little chat. It was an embarrassment to watch it and an abuse of a position of influence.

well said, the sight of the man sickens me, one evil bastard and the tripe out of him about religion. hes singularly responsible for more ruined lives then anyone else these past 35 years.

Kerry Mike

It was a load of shite last night but you would expect nothing more from Kenny. Lots of skeletons in his closet but nothing exposed by the plank at least we have a peace of some kind lasting up and senility has moderated some of his extreme views, which cant be a bad thing.

I had to laugh when they were giving out the samples of the ham later in the show and there was a shot of Ian Og smelling it first and then looking around as if for confirmation from Daddy if it was okay to taste it. A smarmy looking hoor.

Was the story about the Vatican visit true or was he just trying to get a reaction. I heard he is guest of honour in Croke Park this evening...
2011: McGrath Cup
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magickingdom

from todays irish times


'Late Late Show' slot with Paisleys an orgy of cosiness

ANN MARIE HOURIHANE

Ian Paisley rewrote history at a wholesale rate on Friday night and interviewer Pat Kenny let him away with it

REMEMBER WHEN the biggest worry we had was Northern Ireland? That national anxiety took up, oh, whole minutes of our year, mainly when we were talking to concerned foreigners about it. You don't want to seem uncaring. But even that fitful effort from the citizens of the Republic now seems a long time ago.

So last Friday, despite all the advance publicity, it was a bit of a jolt to see Ian Paisley walk on to the set of the Late Late Show .

Ian Paisley and the Late Late are a perfect match; looking at the two of them it is hard to believe that the last 30 years ever happened. At the start of their public lives both Ian Paisley and the Late Late Show were viewed as edgy, radical and a threat to the status quo. Now time and lesser rivals have caught up with the two of them, and they have become museum pieces, occasionally illuminated by flashes of charm.

The Late Late , in any event, is not altogether to blame for its fate.

The RTÉ authorities were first too lazy and then too frightened to alter a format which has not changed since the 1960s. It is a mammoth of a programme: often woolly, occasionally frightening and unwieldy at all times.

Ian Paisley seems similarly determined to deny that he has changed a jot. He was a firebrand preacher. He made a virtue of immovability. His favourite word was always no. But remaining teetotal and refusing to go to the cinema unless the film is about Oliver Cromwell (bless!) is not quite the same thing as not changing. It is rather terrifying to think that the problems of Northern Ireland could have been solved years before they actually were, just by making Ian Paisley top dog. Wasn't it Albert Reynolds who diagnosed that the promotion of Ian Paisley to glory was going to be one of the key steps on the road to peace? On Friday night it was fascinating to hear Ian Paisley talk about his first encounter with Martin McGuinness of Sinn Féin: "After the biggies went away. After the prime ministers went away."

The biggies! For a fundamentalist Protestant Ian Paisley seems to hold very hierarchical views. Could it really be true that all he wanted all along was to be the Main Man? To southerners Ian Paisley was a rather reassuring figure; a cartoon fire- and- brimstone Protestant, of the type the nuns used to warn us about. Add to this his physical beauty (on Friday night a 12-year-old viewer was amazed when she heard he was 80 "I thought he was 56!"), his humour and his charm, and he became the northern Protestant with whom we could, if not deal, at least exchange pleasantries. Actually, he was the only northern Protestant we knew. So it is no wonder that his welcome here has always been warm. At the opening of the Battle of the Boyne centre last May, as he and Bertie Ahern enjoyed their respective political swansongs, a northern reporter told The Irish Times's Miriam Lord: "Big Ian doesn't even get a reception like this in Ballymena."

Minders had to push back autograph hunters. Baroness Eileen stole the show with an impromptu and generous speech. The orchestra struck up Danny Boy and quite a lot of people cried. Ian Paisley – part of what we are.

Everybody knows that a lot of northern Catholics will never forgive Paisley for his incendiary posturing. But many northern Protestants won't forgive him either, for his egomania, his 17th-century moralising and the fact that he became the most recognised northern Protestant on the island – not quite the representative they had hoped for. The Paisley telephone has probably stopped ringing since his retirement, so it is no wonder that this charming elderly couple decided to have the big night out in Dublin.

What emerged was an orgy of cosiness, which seemed to satisfy all the parties concerned. History was rewritten at a wholesale rate. Asked how she felt when they first met, Baroness Eileen said, "I just enjoyed his preaching". This innocuous statement was undermined as soon as it was made by a photograph that flashed on to our screens of the young preacher Paisley, looking drop dead gorgeous. A picture of the young Paisleys, with Eileen sitting on Ian's knee, showed a lively and sexy couple.

This was a nice thing to know about the Paisleys, just as it was nice to know that he is an attentive husband ("still is" said Baroness Eileen) and father.

Pat Kenny handled all this very well. But it was strange to see him, one of the best current affairs interviewers this country ever produced, showing so little curiosity about Ian Paisley. Asked if he had any regrets, Ian Paisley replied, predictably, in the negative. This seemed extraordinary from a man who had stoked the cauldron of northern Irish politics his whole working life, who had seen children incinerated and innocent people assassinated simply for being Catholic – or Protestant. Pat Kenny let him away with it. Perhaps he was right. We don't know much about Northern Ireland and its suffering, but we know what we like.

This article appears in the print edition of the Irish Times

T O Hare

Just seeing this shite now..... He comes across as a Saint and his family are the Waltons.. Pat Kenny is an embarrasment to Ireland... Ireland expected better than that crap!!! 
Kenny just makes you cringe!!! The Late Late show used to be controversial and hard-hitting!!! It reminds me of Wogan!!!
"2008 Gaaboard Cheltenham fantasy league winner"

Tony Baloney

Pat knows what a vagina is and where the g spot is. It's been educational tonight. For him at least ;)

Doogie Browser

Quote from: Tony Baloney on February 27, 2009, 10:29:11 PM
Pat knows what a vagina is and where the g spot is. It's been educational tonight. For him at least ;)
Good lord, what was Robert Vaughn talking about??

Puckoon

Where is the damn Gspot?

f**k I wish RTE broadcast in the states.

Fear ón Srath Bán

Quote from: Puckoon on February 27, 2009, 10:51:32 PM
Where is the damn Gspot?

Apparently, it's about half-way, just at the neck of the bladder, apparently.
Carlsberg don't do Gombeenocracies, but by jaysus if they did...

Donagh

#147
The Stoops must be in town for the FFer bash

The Real Laoislad

Quote from: Puckoon on February 27, 2009, 10:51:32 PM
Where is the damn Gspot?


What does it matter where it is,once your satisfied thats all that matters!
You'll Never Walk Alone.

Puckoon

Quote from: Fear ón Srath Bán on February 27, 2009, 11:39:11 PM
Quote from: Puckoon on February 27, 2009, 10:51:32 PM
Where is the damn Gspot?

Apparently, it's about half-way, just at the neck of the bladder, apparently.

:o :o

You are a man who must be respected padre.