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‘Thank god Tommy wasn't there' – Ireland AM fans ‘dying with laughter' after Muireann floored by Alan's cheeky blunder

‘Thank god Tommy wasn't there' – Ireland AM fans ‘dying with laughter' after Muireann floored by Alan's cheeky blunder

The Irish Sun2 days ago
IRELAND AM fans were left "dying with laughter" after Alan Hughes made a major slip-up live on air.
The popular presenter and his co-host
3
Muireann and Alan were back on air for their usual telly laughs
Credit: Instagram
3
Alan made a hilarious slip-up live on air
Credit: Instagram
3
Fans were left 'howling'
Credit: Instagram
Muireann and
The conversation quickly turned to the subject of the cost of an average 99 these days - but Alan hilariously got his numbers mixed up.
The
Muireann was stunned as she turned and asked: "A what?", as Alan burst into a fit of laughter.
READ MORE ON ALAN HUGHES
He quickly clarified: "A 99. Sorry, a 99 in your area."
The pair were left in stitches after the mistake and Muireann added: "Oh it's very early, what time is it? It's 7.30."
"Alan mixes up his words when reacting to Currans Service Station's 'BIG BOY' nine-inch 99 ice cream cone."
MOST READ IN THE IRISH SUN
Fans were left in stitches as they raced to the comment section, calling it "TV gold".
Miriam said: "Omg - howling."
Muireann O'Connell leave fans divided with unique TV look
Rachael wrote: "Actually dying with laughter."
Justine commented: "Funniest moment EVER."
Eileen said: "TV Gold."
Another added: "Thank God Tommy wasn't there."
Earlier this week, an Ireland AM guest opened up about their
Irish influencer, Alan McGarry, appeared on the hit breakfast show alongside
Alan
and
Muireann
to share their eye-opening cosmetic experience.
'ENOUGH WAS ENOUGH'
The
Alan confessed: "Back then I was just not understanding what I wanted to look like I was just trying to enhance myself.
"I didn't know where I wanted to be and who I wanted to look like."
The content creator added: "Growing up I was a little bit more chubbier, I was ginger and people used to pick on me and I just wanted to change my appearance.
"I just wanted to get away from all those bad names, so I started getting into filler."
The TikTok star highlighted how lip filler became a "big trend" when they were a teenager.
They admitted: "The Jenner's were doing it, it was trendy."
McGarry admitted that the cosmetic surgeries started to become an "addiction" quite early on in their journey.
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The Irish reading roadtrip: Aoife Barry's literary tour of the Emerald Isle
The Irish reading roadtrip: Aoife Barry's literary tour of the Emerald Isle

Irish Examiner

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

The Irish reading roadtrip: Aoife Barry's literary tour of the Emerald Isle

Every Irish writer takes their hometown with them to the page, whether that influence is obvious or not. Some of our finest writers dwell in the world of imagination, like Brian Friel, who spun the town of Ballybeg out of memories of childhood summers in Glenties, Donegal. Aoife Barry has gathered 15 books to sum up Ireland's modern literary age. Photograph Moya Nolan Others stick to reality, creating a universe of characters who can live in a range of Irish locations, like Anne Enright. So why not take a 'reading roadtrip' around Ireland, and experience life in different counties without leaving your house? We've gathered a mix of 15 contemporary favourites and new novels together to help you begin the journey around the island of Ireland. Antrim The Raptures by Jan Carson (2022) Ballymena-born author Jan Carson excels in writing fiction with a magic realism twist, and this is her at the peak of her powers. The Raptures is set in Ballylack, a fictional small village inspired by the Ballymena (and surrounding areas) that Carson grew up in. Something strange begins happening in Ballylack in 1993 to young pupils in the village school. At the centre of the story is a young girl called Hannah, who escapes a mystery illness but finds herself visited by her dead classmates. A gripping and astute novel that brings us into the world of evangelical Protestantism and explores its impact on young people. Belfast The Benefactors by Wendy Erskine The Benefactors by Wendy Erskine (2025) One of this year's best novels comes from Belfast's Wendy Erskine, who is already well-known as a stellar short story writer. In The Benefactors, we meet Frankie, Miriam and Bronagh, three mothers whose lives collide when their teenage sons are accused of a crime. While the main plot might be dark, Erskine is always able to bring a shimmering levity to her work, and the novel is crammed full of amazing characters. Plus, she also creates a Greek chorus of Belfast voices that paint a multifaceted picture of the city. Simply stunning. Clare The Green Road - Anne Enright (2015) The Madigan children were all brought up by their mother Rosaleen in a house called Ardeevin in Co Clare. In The Green Road, Anne Enright - one of the country's finest writers, and the inaugural Laureate for Irish Fiction - lets the Madigans tell their stories as the grown-up children head back for a last Christmas at their childhood home. There's so much here to enjoy about the various Madigans and their foibles and struggles, as well as the humour Enright injects into so many of the situations (particularly around how she depicts Celtic Tiger excesses). While she journeys throughout the globe in this novel, the north star for this story is the family's Co Clare home. Cork The Rachel Incident by Caroline O'Donoghue. The Rachel Incident by Caroline O'Donoghue (2023) This funny, perceptive book about a close friendship between two students (one a relatively wild young woman and the other a closeted young man) captures Cork city in the 2000s perfectly. O'Donoghue, who grew up in Rochestown, creates utterly real characters - the book is partly based on a friendship of hers - who bumble their way carelessly through life as they try to figure out how to live as adults. This is a real time machine back to a Cork of a certain era. Channel 4 is currently adapting the book into a TV series. Carlow Dinner Party: A Tragedy by Sarah Gilmartin (2021) Although Sarah Gilmartin is from Limerick, her first novel is set between Carlow and Dublin. This is a family saga that moves between past and present, opening and closing with a family dinner party. At the centre of the story is Kate, who is holding the dinner party to mark the 16th anniversary of her sister's death. Regardless of where in the country you read this, you'll find much that's compelling in the story of this fractious Carlow family. Donegal The Boy from the Sea by Garrett Carr (2025) 'We were a hardy people, raised facing the Atlantic.' So opens this debut novel from Garrett Carr, set in the fishing port of Killybegs in Co Donegal. This epic part of Ireland's coast is a fitting location to set a book about something as dramatic as the discovery of a baby alive in a barrel. Lyrical, moving and full of beautiful descriptions of nature, this is a novel that brings us right into life in rural Donegal. Dublin Youth by Kevin Curran (2023) There are countless books you could read to give you a sense of Dublin past and present - from Dubliners by James Joyce, to Conversations with Friends by Sally Rooney, to The Commitments by Roddy Doyle. But to get a glimpse of an underexplored part of suburban Dublin, try Youth by Kevin Curran. This polyphonic novel, set in Balbriggan (where Curran is an English teacher in the local secondary school) is a propulsive, empathic book centred on the voices of four young people growing up in the town, each dealing with their own issues. Galway Let Me Go Mad In My Own Way, by Elaine Feeney Let Me Go Mad in My Own Way by Elaine Feeney (2025) The latest novel from Elaine Feeney is set, like her previous two novels, in her home county of Galway. Let Me Go Mad in My Own Way (which takes its name from the Sophocles play Electra) is a story about home, about memories that linger and family ghosts that still haunt. At its opening, Claire O'Connor is living in London. But soon she is back home in Co Galway, dealing with the loss of her mother and caring for her dying father. Through Claire's story, Feeney deftly moves through Irish history and examines the reasons why people have such strong links to the land. This is a book that contains multitudes (and trad wives). Kerry Haven by Emma Donoghue (2022) The Skellig islands are one of Ireland's true wonders, not just because of their beauty but because of their sheer, raw power. The idea of people living on Skellig Michael seems absolutely unbelievable, which is why Donoghue's novel is so interesting. Haven tells the story of three monks who set off from Clonmacnoise to make their home there in early medieval times. She explores in fascinating detail exactly what it took to live that remotely - those who aren't into eating seabirds, look away. Kildare Snowflake by Louise Nealon (2021) Though you might consider this a 'Trinity novel', as the protagonist Debbie goes to the university in Dublin, it's partly set in Kildare. Debbie lives on a dairy farm with her mother and uncle, and it's these scenes that give this book its emotional heft. Rather than being the typical story of someone who decamps to Dublin for college, Snowflake draws its tension from Debbie returning each evening to her eccentric and at times difficult life at home. Nealon herself grew up in Kildare, so you never have to doubt her love for the county. Laois There Came A-Tapping by Andrea Carter (2025) Thriller fans will find plenty to be spooked about in this standalone novel from Andrea Carter. Her Inishowen series sees her focus on the activities of a solicitor based in Donegal, but in There Came-A-Tapping she brings us to Laois, and specifically the foot of the Slieve Bloom mountains. The beauty of the area becomes threatening as a heartbroken Allie moves into a tiny cottage to try and cope with the disappearance of her partner. Carter grew up in the area, so is well able to mine its dark sides - as well as the more lovely sides of rural life. But you might not look at a raven the same way after reading this. Mayo Fun and Games by John Patrick McHugh Fun and Games by John Patrick McHugh (2025) Admittedly, this is set on a fictional island off the coast of Co Mayo. But there's so much to Fun and Games that feels utterly real - its depiction of island life, how the 17-year-old protagonist John Masterson tries to figure out love and relationships while hanging out with friends, working shifts in the local hotel and going to GAA practice. This is a trip to the west coast but it's also a trip back to those heady, unforgettable teenage years. Tipperary The Spinning Heart by Donal Ryan (2013) Donal Ryan is a native of Nenagh, Co Tipperary, and it's in North Tipperary that he set his first novel, a series of stories told by locals from a small town. Set just after the recession, this captures all the heartbreak and confusion of that time, but is deeply rooted in the individual voices of those he focuses on, from single mother Réaltín who lives on a ghost estate to Vasya, a Siberian worker learning about life in Ireland. Nature always features massively in Ryan's work, as it's through the changing of the seasons and the tiny details among the hedgerows that he often finds meaning. Wexford Nora Webster by Colm Tóibín (2014) Enniscorthy native Colm Tóibín has returned frequently to his hometown in his novels, and it would be easy to pick Brooklyn or his latest novel Long Island to showcase the vivid stories he conjures from the area. But one of his most heartbreaking books is Nora Webster, about the titular character trying to get her life back together after her husband dies. There is a real truth to how Tóibín captures the comfort and drama of living in a small town, where everyone knows your business before you even know yourself. Waterford The Amusements by Aingeala Flannery The Amusements by Aingeala Flannery (2022) Welcome to Tramore in the Sunny South East, a place that will immediately lead to images of funfairs and summer craic. This all lies in the background of Aingeala Flannery's debut novel, which is a series of interlinked stories about life in the town, featuring characters who move in and out of the foreground. With such a wide variety of stories, you really feel that you get to experience life in Tramore, both good and bad. Flannery is a native of the town, meaning she captures many small details that others might not notice.

Wedding of the Week: Cork couple Emma and Cian's dream big day in Kerry castle
Wedding of the Week: Cork couple Emma and Cian's dream big day in Kerry castle

Irish Examiner

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Wedding of the Week: Cork couple Emma and Cian's dream big day in Kerry castle

CORK couple Emma Barry Murphy and Cian Griffin said their 'I do's' and held their reception at Ballyseede Castle Hotel, Co Kerry. Emma, from Wellington Road, and Cian, from Carrigrohane, were married by celebrant Jessica Bradley in the castle belfry. 'Jessica made the entire ceremony so enjoyable — there was plenty of laughing going on,' says Emma. Emma Barry Murphy and Cian Griffin. Pictures: SOSAC Photography Both sets of parents, Olive and Kieran Barry Murphy and Josephine and Stephen Griffin, were joined by Emma's grandparents, Pat and Sean Barry Murphy, and Cian's grandmother, Betty Hawkins. 'We're beyond lucky to have had our grandparents in attendance,' says the bride. Emma's sister Lauren Barry Murphy jetted home from Melbourne to be her maid of honour and her friends Cliodhna Kelly, Kate English and Robyn King were the bridesmaids. Emma Barry Murphy and Cian Griffin. Pictures: SOSAC Photography Cian's friend Emmett Doyle was his best man with his brother Ronan Griffin joining forces with his friends Peter Martin and Olan Dennehy as groomsmen. Emma and Cian met through mutual friends in December 2021. 'We had our first date in the Sin E bar,' she says. 'We got engaged on Barleycove Beach, West Cork, in the torrential rain on August 4, 2023.' Led by one of the castle wolfhounds, Emma Barry Murphy and her dad Kieran Barry Murphy and bridal party Lauren Barry Murphy, Cliodhna Kelly, Kate English, and Robyn King walk to the belfry aisle. Pictures: SOSAC Photography They chose a castle wedding because of the fairytale factor and also from a 'logistic and organisation' perspective, says the bride: 'Once we viewed Ballyseede, we instantly knew it was the place. Not only was it just magical and stunning, but it was clear the team there were total professionals at running a wedding. We wanted a civil ceremony, not because we're against the church, but because it would be more 'us'. Emma Barry Murphy with her sister and maid of honour Lauren Barry Murphy who travelled from Melbourne for the occasion. Pictures: SOSAC Photography 'Every time we think about the occasion we just smile from ear to ear. It was our dream wedding. I can't say enough about the staff! They were amazing from the minute we landed there to the minute we left. And of course, the dogs of Ballyseede were a huge part of the weekend, especially Dolan, their youngest Irish wolfhound, who was often to be found in my bridal suite.' The wolfhounds at Ballyseede Castle added to the occasion for Emma Barry Murphy and Cian Griffin. Pictures: SOSAC Photography The bride looked super-elegant in a Chosen by Kyha gown from The Suite, Rathmines, and the dapper groom and groomsmen's suits were from Redchurch in Cork City. 'My hair was done by Emma Fitzgibbon, owner of Hygge Hair in Douglas, and my makeup was done by Annette O'Brien — they were both so fabulous!' says Emma. Emma Barry Murphy with her bridal party Lauren Barry Murphy, Cliodhna Kelly, Kate English, and Robyn King. Pictures: SOSAC Photography Behind the camera were Shane O'Sullivan, SOSAC Photography ( and videographer Maurice O'Carroll. 'Shane and Maurice really contributed to the fun and relaxed vibes,' says Emma. Tie the Knot created the impressive décor and music was also important to the couple. 'The amazing Lorna Moore performed our ceremony music and I was blown away,' adds Emma. 'The wedding band, which also provided our reception music and DJ, was the wonderful Black Tye. Our first dance song was Kylie Minogue's 'Love at First Sight'.' Emma Barry Murphy with her dad Kieran Barry Murphy. Pictures: SOSAC Photography This was some time after the groom had serenaded the guests. 'It might sound kind of niche but one of Cian's party pieces at other wedding 'day twos' is to perform 'You're so Vain' by Carly Simon and so when he stood up and performed it for us at the end of the speeches and it really got the crowd going!' says Emma. The newlyweds, who live in Ballincollig, honeymooned in Mallorca. Emma Barry Murphy and Cian Griffin. Pictures: SOSAC Photography Emma is a fulltime digital marketing manager for a blockchain company, and Cian is an innovation analyst at Pepsi. The bride is also a well-known barre instructor. 'I teach barre on the side (in-person and online) after creating my side hustle, Barre by Emma,' she says. If you would like your wedding featured in Weekend email

Brown Bread: how a modern Irish emigration film is set to move the needle
Brown Bread: how a modern Irish emigration film is set to move the needle

Irish Examiner

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Brown Bread: how a modern Irish emigration film is set to move the needle

Shaunagh Connaire is bringing it all back home. More specifically, all the way back to the kitchen of her childhood home. That family home in Longford was the starting point for a long and successful career during which Connaire, an Emmy-nominated documentary maker, has reported for the BBC, Channel 4, and the Financial Times, among others, before then going on to spend three years working for the Clooney Foundation for Justice, including a memorable trip to Africa with Amal Clooney and Michelle Obama. Yet it is the homeplace back in the Midlands that also forms the backdrop for a first foray into fictional drama. Her 14-minute short film Brown Bread received its world premiere at the Galway Film Fleadh this week, and arriving at this point was truly a family affair. 'That's my parent's kitchen in the home where I grew up,' Connaire says down a Zoom connection from her new home in Lisbon. 'Fitted by my uncle Jackie, husband of my late godmother.' And here's another connection. Brown Bread is a moving, poignant, and at times humorous look at the emigrant experience, and it was anchored in Connaire's own story. Just as the character of Aine, played by Katie McGrath, couldn't get home from her job in New York to attend her godmother's funeral, Connaire also missed out on her beloved godmother's funeral due to issues with her Green Card application. 'What you have to do is hand over your passport,' Connaire explains, 'and my immigration lawyers have said, now, you know, you're not going to be able to travel with this, and I was like, it should be fine, a couple of months or three months, whatever it was, maybe it was six months, I can't remember. And then my godmother, who I was very close to, also from Longford, passed away in that period, and genuinely, it just did one with my head. 'As an Irish person, the guilt, but it wasn't even just that. It was a very profound moment. All I wanted to do was be back in a very simple house in Longford drinking a very simple cup of tea with my family. It just made me question everything about why I had kind of chased this in New York, that felt very at odds with how I was brought up, simple enough beginnings, and my relationship with my aunt was very much based on [having] a cup of tea.' THE GUILT Fionnuala Flanagan in Brown Bread By any measure, Connaire's career has been a success. Never mind the two Emmy Award nominations, in 2021 she became the first woman to be awarded the freedom of Co Longford. Yet the passing of her cherished aunt sparked conflicting thoughts that no doubt occupy the hearts and minds of Irish people living the world over. 'It's like a modern Irish emigration story,' she says, adding of Brown Bread: 'I was trying very hard to steer away from anything that felt twee.' She says her own two children are 'very Irish', despite living in the US and now in Portugal, and she adds that being able to portray her home town with 'a sense of pride' was 'hugely important'. Elements of the film — some of the locations, and also some home video footage — further anchors the fictional story in the reality of Connaire's life. Moving to Lisbon, she says, has helped with that connection to home, and it is certainly a change from the starkness of one of her children having undergone a 'shooter' safety drill at their New York school. 'I kind of, in a joking way, pitched it as 'we're moving home!' and whispered, 'to Europe'.' Her sister lives in Australia and so proximity to Longford — and Donegal, her husband's home county — counts for a lot, but as she says: 'You have to chase your own life, you have to do what's good for your own family. And this is where we are now.' TAKING A TILT Shaunagh Connaire: 'It's been a creative itch I've had forever, to write a script and all with a view, I would say, to doing something bigger after this short. The short is a little test.' Photo: Ray Ryan And it has been quite a journey. For Channel 4's Unreported World, Connaire secretly filmed in China where clinics provide electro-shock therapy to 'cure' homosexuality. A particularly harrowing edition of Unreported World saw Connaire covering the efforts of medics with Médecins sans Frontières in combatting the Ebola virus in Sierra Leone. Yet despite all that time in front of the camera, Connaire credits her three years working for the Clooneys as the inspiration for her tilt at fictional drama, recently telling Variety: 'I think being in their presence and learning a little bit about the world of Hollywood, gave me the confidence to enter this world. 'I would say this about all kind of different experiences I've had being around amazing filmmakers in current affairs as well, like when you're in people's company, and you see what they're doing up close, and you're like, ok, pretty sure that feels like I can probably do that too, everything feels a bit more accessible,' she says. 'I would say, with my role at the [Clooney] Foundation, a big part of it was actually directing short films for George, and he was the executive producer, and I was the director, and we're working really closely and collaborating on that. And so, on first cuts, I was getting amazing feedback. So I was like, Okay, if George thinks my films are ok... it definitely gave me a little bit of confidence. 'It's been a creative itch I've had forever, to write a script and all with a view, I would say, to doing something bigger after this short. The short is a little test.' Connaire saw the Clooney Foundation as having the biggest platform to 'amplify voices' — a case in point being the gathering of evidence of indiscriminate attacks by Russian forces in Ukraine that killed civilians and destroyed civilian objects, as well as violations committed by Russian armed forces, which ultimately led to cases being lodged in court. Connaire has previously spoken about the strangeness of being interviewed by the Clooneys for the job, but after three years with the Foundation, topped off with a visit with Amal and Michelle Obama to Malawi and South Africa, she knew it was time to move on. 'It was such a high,' she says. 'I kind of knew in the back of my head that I was potentially going to leave so I was like, feck it, I might as well just leave on this high.' THE GRÁ She once received Batman balloons from George, a former celluloid Bruce Wayne, for her 40th birthday, but she doesn't ever see her former employer running for the White House, adding: 'I don't believe celebrities and politics should mix.' Given what's happening in America, maybe even Batman himself would struggle. Connaire also sees journalism as being 'under attack' around the world but particularly in America, which, she believes, does not have the buffer of adequate public service broadcasting. She also takes the point that in some ways, drama can engage people with real life issues in a way beyond that of reportage, adding: 'I would love to create something that actually moves the needle.' So she is working on a 'prestige drama', and it sounds like the next step after Brown Bread has circulated among the various festivals. Yet there is no escaping the grá for home. Back in 2018 she was invited to speak at her former school, Méan Scoil Mhuire, only to be told on the day that the school could not show a montage of her broadcast work for reasons which included upholding the school's Catholic ethos. That led to Connaire not being able to attend and instead issuing a statement for the students about her work, and she never did get to show that montage in the way it was initially envisaged. 'I always will stick to my values, and that was very much against what I believed in,' she says now. There is a small echo of this in Brown Bread and the subsequent granting of the Freedom of the County and all the assistance of local people in the making the short film shows that the county holds her dear as one of their own. There is a lot to be said for it – and the related home comforts. 'Just something simple like going to SuperValu and buying purple Snack bars and sausages — that's high on my priority list,' she says. Brown Bread will be showing at festivals internationally throughout 2025

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