:p
It's the only way we'll learn :oQuote:
Be careful what you wish for.
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I didn't see this. If its anything like Upwardly mobile and The Cassidys, then holy christ.
The best drama RTE did in recent times was 'Pure Mule'. That was quality.
I'd have called it Pure Rubbish.
Pure Mule was absolute tripe. Right up there with that other
country & western singer shyte they had on a while back!
RTE - Rarely Televise Entertainment
That wasn't the one about the GAA team that wore the same colours as Sky Ones Dreamteam was it? I know it had some quasi-agricultural reference or some such in its title. Might've been something about having four toes either maybe...? Gone now anyway. Our loss I s'pose.:)
Oops, never thought I'd have to be careful when giving out about Mules :D
Totally forgot about that, that was another poor offering. "'On Home Ground".Quote:
Originally Posted by Lionel Ritchie;
I think that was set somewhere in Kildare.
"Trouble in Paradise" was the other rubbish I was thinking of. I think it was
supposed to be set somewhere near Tullamore or Shannonbridge.
Hardly Paradise!!!
I forgot Soupy Norman one of the funniest shows on any station , But i dont think RTE had much to do with making that they just showed it and since it was so good they wont make another series .
I only caught a few minutes of Soupy Norman but it looked very funny.
Was that all Barry Murphys work?
I think he's very funny, although he was my sworn enemy after he took the
p!ss out of me at a comedy gig in Athlone. It was about 12 years ago and
I swore I'd have my revenge :mad:
Played footy against him in Herbert Park about 4 years later and creased
him with a very hard, but fair ;) tackle. He was wearing a knee support so
I thought if he was silly enough to show a sign of weakness I had to take
advantage.
Well yes its normally the way things happen here. RTE rarly commision a show in the way the BBC does , what would happen is the production company would make the show and sell it to rte ( there for RTE have very little to do with the making of it same way they had nothing to do with prison break but still show it ) .
But a production company normally wouldnt go and make a second series unless the station in this case RTE said they would want it . If they say no it wouldnt get the go ahead .
No TV programmes get made in Ireland without RTE/TV3/TG4 paying for it. The production might be independent but nothing gets done without commisioning
Does anyone watch the "comedy" night on rte
I had the misfortune of losing reception on sky digital on monday night,
so stuck with the poverty channels i sat through an episode of the english teacher on rte, is this supposed to be funny?
I dont think i laughed once.. its embarrasing to watch its such a blatant copy of the office's mocumentary setup except the script is pathetic....
I thought that rubbish prosperity was funnier ;)
after this carcrash television i then watched the Podge and Rodge show,
since when has saying gee-bag and fanny repeatedly been funny?
and this is where our tv liscence money goes :o
Rte arent that bad, i mean their documentaries are quite good............the Hidden History series (or whatever you call it) has been superb, and their Sport coverage is far and away the best thats out their
I watch Rte and TnG a lot and find it much better that BBc, etc, and would prefer if the ycontinued to produce irish progs no matter (lime Nked camera, Podge and Rodge, etc) than wasting money on trash american tv (which is so brilliant:rolleyes:)
A friend and I have been working on a sketch show for the last year or so. At no point did either of us ever consider going to RTE with it. The original plan was to go to the BBC and ITV with it, although we've now decided to go the radio route (in the UK). The only think RTE has been good for is giving us every confidence that we'll succeed, because we know we're better than almost anything on it.
The Best Irish sitcom ever has to be '' C U Burn '' on TG4... As Gaeilge.If it's radio then reconsider RTE because their radio departments have always given airtime to radio '' drama''. They also seem to have a better feel for comedy than their television counterparts. Also try BBC Radio Ulster before going to Britain, because the Northerners are more in tune with our humour than they might in Ingerland.