Originally Posted by
Eminence Grise
Frustration, indeed! And not unjustifiably so. When look at the listings and see more home produced editions of reality TV franchises I groan. Or the same handful of presenters appearing on everything, stifling new talent. Or Tubridy and O’Connor pressganging anybody hanging round the RTE canteen to appear on their shows... I have to agree with much of what you feel.
But, in what sense has RTE failed the public? It’s a mixed model broadcaster. Is its Reithian responsibility to direct the people towards instructional and formative viewing (as de Valera implied in his speech, and is evident in earlier Dáil debates about the establishment of a national radio station in the 1920s) or to provide the public with the programming they want to watch? Force-feeding the masses live LoI, club rugby, inter-county camogie, 40x20 singles handball (more, please!), the Kilfenora Ceili Band or reruns of 1970s Trom agus Eadrom may not actually engender greater feelings of warmth and fuzziness from the Irish viewing public, whose media consumption gratifies their social and personal needs. Perhaps it is the Irish public who have failed de Valera’s parochial and insular vision of Irishness? Or treated it as obsessive jingoism should be? Perhaps TG4 is a more reliable broadcaster of Irishness and Irish values than RTE ever was, and we should encourage its development, rather than assume that RTE, one eye on the licence fee, the other on advertising revenue, will ever do anything other than bow to the majority view.
I think that in invoking de Valera, you’ve holed your argument below the waterline. Apart from his remarks being 50 years old, they hark back to an even older era that artificially created and ideologically stylised a Celtic, Catholic nation. Personally, I believe he was one of the worst influences on Irish society, politics and culture in the twentieth century. If he is a founder of a great state, then we are no more than accidental offspring conceived after an awkward fumble in the dark with classic republicanism, and abandoned to fend for ourselves. I think we have better role models, and the potential to be better than de Valera’s vision allowed.