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Samantha Mumba calls for axe of Late Late eurosong special

Samantha Mumba calls for axe of Late Late eurosong special

Extra.ie​08-06-2025
Pop star Samantha Mumba said the song contest to choose Ireland's Eurovision entry should not be staged on The Late Late Show.
The teen 'Gotta Tell You' singer, now 42, yesterday indicated the RTÉ chat show is not the best venue for the Eurosong competition, saying it 'deserves its own [show]' and 'ideally' should be in a venue that is 'set up, even sound-wise, for musicians'.
'Because I don't think [a television studio] is the set-up,' she told the Brendan O'Connor Show yesterday. Samantha Mumba peforming on The Late Late Eurosong Special. Pic: Andres Poveda
Mumba said she stands by her criticism of the Eurosong judging panel and was a 'bit surprised' at the amount of coverage her comments got.
Mumba criticised the panel − made up of choreographer and Dancing with the Stars judge Arthur Gourounlian, 2FM broadcaster Laura Fox, cook and TV presenter Donal Skehan, and singer Bambie Thug − following The Late Late Show Eurosong Special on February 7, where she came second with My Way.
Norwegian singer Emmy won with Laika Party. In an Instagram post in February, Mumba thanked supporters and expressed pride in her performance. In a later post, she said she felt 'strongly' that the judging panel 'were dismissive of all the contestants'. EMMY performs Laika Party at Trinity College Dublin. Pic: The Late Late Show via YouTube
Donal Skehan responded that he stood by his role and the feedback he gave on the night, saying his comments were 'never personal'.
RTÉ had also said at the time that it was 'extremely grateful' to the Eurosong judging panel for 'their professionalism, their insight, integrity, and good humour'.
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Marie Crowe on raising a sports-mad family and playing GAA
Marie Crowe on raising a sports-mad family and playing GAA

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

Marie Crowe on raising a sports-mad family and playing GAA

With a young sports-mad family and a full schedule of summer tournaments, RTÉ sports presenter Marie Crowe is busy doing what she loves. She talks to Claire O'Mahony about the importance of sports for young women, as well as everyone else. Chatting to Marie Crowe the day after the All-Ireland semi-final, when Donegal trounced Meath in the football, demands the question: what does she reckon Donegal's chances are against Kerry in the final? "I think if they can stop David Clifford, they can be in with a great chance of winning but I don't know, he's so good, it's going to be very difficult," says the sports presenter, who wasn't at the match on the gloriously sunny Sunday, but was instead at work in the basement of the RTÉ Radio Centre. It's a full-on summer for Marie, who recently returned from maternity leave, after she gave birth to her daughter, Jessie, in March. 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Paudie Clifford covers every blade of the pitch – and doesn't hold back in post-match chat
Paudie Clifford covers every blade of the pitch – and doesn't hold back in post-match chat

Irish Times

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Paudie Clifford covers every blade of the pitch – and doesn't hold back in post-match chat

The changes in Gaelic football this season didn't only come with the new rules, or innovations, at play. For those watching on television, the diamond-patterned turf in Croke Park proved a distraction that took a bit of getting used to, although Joanne Cantwell on RTÉ One assured us the view from up high was quite different from that which the players would encounter at field level. Still, for those of us sitting on our sofas, not expecting an episode of Landscape Artist of the Year, it took a bit of getting used to, and that was only in the parade when Donegal for some reason decided enough was enough of marching behind the Artane Boys Band and took themselves away from the formalities of it all. Darragh Maloney referred to Donegal's abrupt departure from the parade as part of the 'mind games' in the psychological warfare that goes on between teams at All-Ireland finals. Kerry , though, stuck to the old ways and stayed true to tradition in marching behind the band until the death. 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[ How Tipperary capitalised on Cork's chronic lack of flexibility to take All-Ireland title Opens in new window ] 'It's amazing to see Kerry so excited about winning an All-Ireland,' remarked Mickey Harte on the Beeb, to which Niblock responded by observing – after so many pundits had foreseen a Donegal win – of Kerry that, 'the hurt, the anger, whether it is manufactured, a team can feed off it.' Indeed, over on RTÉ, Damian Lawlor had done what no Donegal defender had managed and only gone and nabbed Paudie Clifford, who seemed more charged up than he had been in his terrific performance throughout where he seemed to cover every blade of the diamond-patterned turf. Paudie didn't mince his words either in his chat with Lawlor. 'We did feel disrespected, being called a one-man team,' he said, with all the assurance of a big brother who knew the bigger picture. It's in their DNA, for sure.

Enda McEvoy's TV verdict: If Clifford walked on sand he wouldn't leave footprints
Enda McEvoy's TV verdict: If Clifford walked on sand he wouldn't leave footprints

Irish Examiner

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Enda McEvoy's TV verdict: If Clifford walked on sand he wouldn't leave footprints

The great day has dawned and there are so many questions to be asked and answered. After such a gloriously expansive championship will two notably expansive teams ('It's the right way to end the year,' Lee Keegan declares on RTÉ) provide a cracker, or, perversely and probably predictably, a damp squib? Agus ceist eile. Why do BBC Northern Ireland have an Irish female comedian you've never heard of, an English actor you've never heard of, Douglas Henshall (a Scottish actor you may or may not have heard of) and Martin Compston, the small guy from Line of Duty, empanelled to give their thoughts on the match? This is exclusive subscriber content. Already a subscriber? Sign in Take us with you this summer. Annual €130€65 Best value Monthly €12€6 / month

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