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Wikipedia

RTÉ One

RTÉ One (Irish: RTÉ a hAon) is an Irish free-to-air flagship television channel owned and operated by Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ). It is the most-popular and most-watched television channel in the country and was launched as Telefís Éireann on 31 December 1961, it was renamed RTÉ in 1966, and it was renamed as RTÉ 1 upon the launch of RTÉ 2 in 1978. It is funded partly by the government's licence fee; the remainder of the funding is provided by commercial advertising. Because RTÉ is funded partly by the licence fee it shows considerably fewer advertisements than most other channels available in Ireland and Northern Ireland.

RTÉ1
CountryIreland
Broadcast areaIreland & Northern Ireland
Worldwide (online)
HeadquartersDonnybrook, Dublin
Programming
Language(s)English
Irish
Irish Sign Language
Picture format1080i 16:9 (HDTV) (2013–)
576i 16:9 (SDTV) (2005–)
576i 4:3 (SDTV) (1961–2005)
Timeshift serviceRTÉ One +1
Ownership
OwnerRaidió Teilifís Éireann (ultimately owned by Government of Ireland)
Key peopleGeorge Dixon
(Channel Controller)
Sister channelsRTÉ2
RTÉjr
RTÉ News
History
Launched31 December 1961
Former namesTelefís Éireann (1961–1966)
RTÉ (1966–1978)
RTÉ 1 (1978–1995)
Links
Websiterte.ie/tv
Availability
Terrestrial
SaorviewChannel 1 (HD)
Channel 11 (+1)
Freeview (Northern Ireland only)Channel 54
Streaming media
Virgin TV AnywhereWatch live (Ireland only)
RTÉ PlayerWatch live (Available depending on rights)
Sky GoWatch Live (Ireland only)

RTÉ One is available to 98% of the Irish population in HD on the Saorview DTT service. It is also available in Northern Ireland via Saorview, Freeview, Sky, and cable provider Virgin Media. The channel is also available online through RTÉ Player.

History

RTÉ One began life as Telefís Éireann in 1961.[1] It was renamed simply as RTÉ in 1966, upon the renaming of the Radio Éireann Authority as Radio Telefís Éireann, and became RTÉ 1 upon the launch of RTÉ 2 in 1978.[2] Originally the station broadcast in black and white throughout the country using the European 625-line standard, as well as on the 405-line television system in the northern and eastern parts of the country; since the mid-50s, many people in these areas already had 405-line TV sets receiving BBC and UTV/HTV transmissions from Wales and Northern Ireland.[3] A standards conversion unit was used to provide the 405-line service, but when this electronic device failed, optical conversion was used, reportedly by directing a 405-line camera at a 625-line monitor.[3] The first programme to be pre-recorded for the new television service was The School Around the Corner, an interview/quiz show created and presented by Paddy Crosbie and produced by James Plunkett.[4]

PAL colour transmissions began in 1968, and the first programme made and transmitted in colour was "John Hume's Derry." The first outside broadcast in colour for RTÉ Television was the 1971 Railway Cup Finals (Gaelic Athletic Association), and soon after that, the Eurovision Song Contest 1971 from Dublin.[5] In the 1970s the studios in RTÉ's Television Centre started being equipped for colour, the first was the news studio in 1974, studio 2 in 1975 and finally studio 1 (the largest studio, used for productions such as The Late Late Show) in 1976.[5]

RTÉ was also the sole Irish TV channel until 1978, when RTÉ 2 (known as Network 2 between 1988 and 2004) was created. The Irish language station TG4 began in 1996 as Teilifís na Gaeilge (TnaG).[6] Since 1998 RTÉ One also competes with Virgin Media One (formerly known as "TV3").[7]

Since it began broadcasting, RTÉ One has competed with BBC One and UTV from Northern Ireland and in the 1980s RTÉ began competing with other satellite and cable channels that are widely available across Ireland through cable subscription services due to the high take up of cable TV from pan-European and UK channels since the 1960s, and the continued roll out of MMDS and satellite during the 1980s and 1990s.

From 1961, RTÉ Television would only broadcast from 17:35 until around 23:30 during Winter months. In 1975 this changed slightly with transmission starting at around 15:30 and concluding around midnight (00:00). 24-hour broadcasts began in the late 1990s. In 1988, RTÉ One launched a schedule with a new news bulletin at 13:00. Currently, RTÉ One does not offer "breakfast television", but from 2013 to 2014 the station aired an early morning current affairs show called Morning Edition, which was also simulcast on RTÉ News Now. Virgin Media One is currently the only indigenous broadcaster in direct competition for this early morning market with Ireland AM since 1999. RTÉ One during the Olympics and special breaking news or election coverage, will provide a special bulletin in the mornings.

On 6 July 2017, RTÉ One extended its on-air hours, starting at 6:00am as opposed to the later 6:20 am as previously.

RTÉ One HD

RTÉ One HD was launched on 21 October 2013—originally in upscaled HD—following the launch of a new Saorview multiplex. Native HD broadcasts began on 16 December 2013.[8]

RTÉ One is now broadcast solely in High Definition (HD) on the national DTT service Saorview, with the Standard Definition simulcast ending on 2 April 2014. However RTÉ still provides a Standard Definition (SD) output of RTÉ One to pay television operators on cable and satellite, for those subscribers who still have equipment that does not support HD.

RTÉ Television decided to launch the new HD service just before the Christmas period to draw audiences attention to the new service available to viewers. RTÉ have started to convert their main production studios to HD, the first being studio 5 in 2012, which is used mainly for sports productions. Any programmes still made in standard-definition are upscaled on the channel and it is intended that the vast majority of the channel's output will be in high-definition in due course. RTÉ One in SD continues to be available on Virgin Media Ireland until more of their customers have upgraded to HD.

Sky Ireland launched the channel on 14 December 2015, as part of a new long-term partnership with RTÉ, however the channel is not available on Sky UK's Northern Ireland EPG. In response to queries, RTÉ currently advises Northern Ireland Sky subscribers to contact Sky on the matter whereas Sky replies that it's an issue for RTÉ as to whether they make their HD channel available.[9]

RTÉ One +1

A timeshift channel for RTÉ One (RTÉ One +1) was launched on 27 May 2011[10] and shares channel space with RTÉjr.[11] The channel was made available on Saorview from its launch, UPC Ireland replaced City Channel with RTÉ One +1 on 13 March 2012. Reeling in the Years does not broadcast on this channel due to music rights restrictions.

It was referred to as RTÉ One Deferred in the Easy TV commercial DTT multiplex application, Easy TV was made up of RTÉ NL and UPC Ireland.[12] RTÉ had also plans to create a third channel called RTÉ Three along with RTÉ One Deferred as reported in the Sunday Business Post in May 2008.[13]

RTÉ Three was dropped for the alternative RTÉ Plus/RTÉjr. RTÉ Plus would have initially been a time shift channel for RTÉ One's prime time schedule, starting each night at 19:00 after RTÉjr ends for the night. This "Phase 1" of RTÉ plus was to begin broadcasting in May 2011. "Phase 2" of RTÉ Plus was to be made up of an entirely different schedule to that of RTÉ One, RTÉ had hoped that this would be made available in May 2012.[14] Minister Pat Carey gave the go ahead for RTÉ One +1 for a maximum of 4 years at which point it will be reviewed. He did not give permission for the second phase in the channel as he was advised by the BAI that it may cause problems for commercial service providers such as TV3.

As part of a new long-term partnership with Sky, RTÉ One +1 launched on Sky channel 115 on 14 December 2015, moving RTÉ2 HD down to 278.[15] On 1 May 2018, the +1 channels and the Entertainment & Documentaries channel sections were moved to 201 - 299 to coincide with the non +1 channel. For example, RTÉ One is on channel 101, and RTÉ One +1 is on 201.[16]

When launched, RTÉ One +1 broadcast from 19:00 to approximately 02:00. On 15 February 2019, RTÉ One +1 began broadcasting 24 hours a day to coincide with the launch of RTÉ2 +1.[17]

Budget

References

The following figures were issued by RTÉ as part of their Annual reports 2008[18] and 2012[19]

Income

Income Type 2008 2012
Licence Fee €81,992,000 €56,139,000
Commercial Income €106,496,000 €65,351,000
Total Income €188,488,000 €121,490,000

Total Costs

Cost Type 2008 2012
Network and other related costs €17,773,000 €14,362,000
Sales Costs €5,278,000 not given
Acquired Programming €13,614,000 €14,897,000
Irish Productions €147,999,000 €100,478,000
Total Costs €184,664,000 €129,737,000

Profit and Loss

2008 2012
€3,824,000 (€8,247,000)

Breakdown of Irish Productions

Production House 2008 2012
RTÉ €93,454,000 €70,448,000
Independent Producers €54,545,000 €30,030,000
Total €147,999,000 €100,478,000

The table below outlines RTÉ One's total in-house and commissioned programming by genre in 2008 and 2012:

Genre 2008 2012
Factual €42,951,000 €27,919,000
Drama €38,776,000 €21,425,000
Entertainment €23,918,000 €18,073,000
Music €2,215,000 €1,311,000
News, Current Affairs and Weather €38,834,000 €30,866,000
Sport €1,305,000 €884,000
Young Peoples Programming
Total €147,999,000 €100,478,000

Programming

2015/2016 season

On 13 August 2015, RTÉ One revealed its 2015/2016 line-up. As part of the new schedule two new dramas will debut on the channel these include the four-part drama series Clean Break (2015) and five-part drama series Rebellion (2016).[20] The 2015/2016 schedule has a stronger focus on documentaries and a lesser focus on domestic drama when compared to previous seasons.[21]

RTÉ One airs a variety of programmes each week, both homegrown programming and imported programming. A typical week of programming on RTÉ One would be as follows: On Sunday night RTÉ's flagship talent show The Voice of Ireland airs at 18.30, with the results show following soap opera Fair City at 20.30. Dragon's Den airs at 21.30 on Sunday nights. On Monday nights at 21.35, there is a questions and answers style show called Claire Byrne Live hosted by Claire Byrne. The long running chat show The Late Late Show hosted by Ryan Tubridy airs Friday nights from 21.35, it is the longest running chat show in the world. On Saturday night, game show The Million Euro Challenge airs at around 20.15, The Saturday Night Show airs at around 21.45, similar to The Late Late Show it has a variety of celebrity guests and music performances. Irish soap opera Fair City airs four times a week on RTÉ One, it airs Sundays at 20:30, Tuesdays, and Thursdays at 20.00, and Wednesdays at 19.30, Fair City is similar to the British format for soap operas such as Coronation Street. RTÉ One also airs British soap opera EastEnders weekly at the same times as BBC One. RTÉ One also air a host of films throughout the week including the midweek movie on Wednesday at 21:30 and the big big movie (usually a children's film) Saturdays at 18:30. RTÉ One also air news coverage throughout the week including a 13:00, 18:00, and 21:00 news broadcast every day.

News and current affairs

RTÉ News and Current Affairs provides all of RTÉ One's News and Current Affairs Programming.

RTÉ News and current affairs television programmes include:

News programming

Current Affairs Programming

RTÉ News and Current Affairs coverage of all major political events such as General Elections, Budgets, Local and European Elections and Referendums. Since 2000 RTÉ has covered the US Presidential Elections live. It also covers major political stories from the Northern Irish Assembly, including elections.

Diversity

RTÉ as a public service broadcaster is committed to providing awareness about the diverse communities found within Ireland. RTÉ aims to providing access to different groups through different mediums.

RTÉ Diversity provides awareness of Ireland's multicultural society. From 2002, RTÉ produced a weekly multicultural show called Mono.[22] The show aired between 2002 and 2005 and had a similar format as Nationwide; but focused more on multicultural issues and had reports from all parts of the country. The show was produced by Kairos Communications for RTÉ[22] and was presented by Shalini Sinha.

RTÉ Diversity commissions a monthly show for individuals with hearing impairments or deafness. Hands On (originally called Sign of the Times) airs every Sunday morning. The show is presented using Irish Sign Language. The show is also subtitled using Irish or English subtitles. In 2009, the number of Hands On programmes were reduced by 60%, from 20 to 7.[23]

Diversity has also been showcased on RTÉ Dramas: The Riordans and Glenroe featured several characters from the Irish Travelling Community. Fair City and The Clinic have showcased a broader range of diversity which includes members of the Roma community, LGBT movement, African heritage, Eastern Europe and other ethnic minorities groups in Ireland.

In April 2010, RTÉ revealed a new multicultural programme which will air from March 2011. The show has a budget of €45,000 per episode.[24]

Cláracha Gaeilge

RTÉ produced the television series Buntús Cainte in 1967, which together with the corresponding series of books, aimed to promote the learning of the Irish Language. The television series was presented by Máire O'Neill and Aileen Geoghegan.[25] In the early 1990s, they produced a similar show with BBC Northern Ireland called Now You're Talking which used the Ulster dialect of Irish. In they early 2000s, they produced a new series called Turas Teanga, which was presented by newsreader Sharon Ní Bheoláin.[26]

During Seachtain na Gaeilge (Irish Language Week), continuity is provided through the Irish Language. During this week they also have a range of shows that promote the learning or use of the Irish language. In 2010 they produced An Cór with Fiachna O Braonáin.[27]

RTÉ also produced the highly successful Irish Language documentary strands Leargás, Scannal and CSÍ, which were first shown on RTÉ One with repeats on TG4.

Nuacht RTÉ provides a round-up of the day's events at 17:40 each weekday.

RTÉ has a dedicated commissioning brief inviting proposals for new Irish-language programming.[28]

Education

In the early years of Teilifís Éireann most of the educational shows were aimed at children such as Dáithí Lacha. In more recent years they have produced literacy programmes for adults such as Read, Write, Now presented by Derek Mooney.[29]

Regional

Nationwide is RTÉ's main regional programme, in 2010 Gala began sponsoring the show. The shows average audience for 2009 was 400,000 viewers.[30] The show began airing in the early 1990s.[31] In 1999 RTÉ tested opt out for Dublin, Cork and Galway on UHF signals, however Chorus (a Dublin cable operator at the time) aired the Galway edition, while NTL (the other Dublin cable operator aired the Dublin version).[32] RTÉ do not provide local opt-out or regional news. However RTÉ Cork produces a number of other Irish shows. Capital D was a programme for Dublin (similar in style to Nationwide), presented by Anne Cassin, it took a look at issues in Dublin. The programme did not return in 2012. Ear to the Ground is a farming magazine show. Nationwide is produced by RTÉ Factual while Ear to the Ground is produced by Independent Films for RTÉ.

Drama and comedy

1960s

In 1961 as Teilifís Éireann got ready to begin broadcasting it appointed Hilton Edwards as head of Drama, he was heavily involved in Irish theatre at the time. At this early stage they produced many international and local plays for television audiences such as Antigone, The Wild Duck, The Fire Raisers, The Government Inspector, The Physicists, Martine, The Well of the Saints, Candida, The Man of Destiny, In the Shadow of the Glen, Church Street, The Field, The Plough and the Stars, The Shadow of a Gunman and The Hostage. Both of Edwards' successors Jim Fitzgerald and Chloe Gibson would continue with stage play adaptations but would also look for original dramas for television. Hugh Leonard adapted James Joyce's Dubliners under the title Dublin and in 1966 he wrote Insurrection, an 8-part real-time series which depicted the events of the 1916 Easter Rising which was broadcast on Easter Week on the 50th anniversary of the rising, it was RTÉ biggest drama production of the 1960s, involving on location filming and the Army. In its first ten years on the air RTÉ produced 103 plays of which 66% were Irish and 50% began life as stage plays. Half of the drama produced came from serials such as the Dublin based urban soap Tolka Row which began broadcasting in 1964 and finished in 1968. In terms of population RTÉ was one of Europe's biggest producers of television drama.[33]

In 1965 The Riordans began broadcasting, this would begin the Wesley Burrowes trilogy of Irish Agrisoaps (Agricultural based dramas), it was followed by Bracken in 1978 (and was aired on RTÉ One) as Gabriel Byrne's character (Pat Barry) moved from Kilkenny to Wicklow and in 1982 two of Bracken's main characters Dinny and Milie Byrne moved to Glenroe which ran until 2001.

1970s

In the 1970s RTÉ produced several urban dramas set outside Dublin. The Burke Enigma began in 1975 and was RTÉ's first police procedural something that they did not return to very often. Partners in Practice was RTÉ's first medical drama and was loosely based on successful TV formats from abroad such as Emergency Ward 10, Dr. Finlay's Casebook, Marcus Welby M.D. and Dr. Kildare. Partners in Practice was set in the new sprawling suburban Dublin in the fictional town of Sallybawn. Sallybawn was based on the new 1970s sprawling developments such as Tallaght. The series was set in the fictional Sallybawn Health Centre. It ran for one season in 1972 and was written by Carolyn Swift. In 1978 Louis Lentin became head of RTÉ Drama having produced Uncle Vanya (1970), King of Friday's Men (1967) and King of the Castle (1977).[34] He started Thursday Playdate, these were once of plays which dramatized current events and current affairs in Ireland. He would also be responsible for The Spike a controversial drama that was to run for 10 weeks only to be taken of the after the fifth episode. Problems surrounded both the content (A very critical look at the VEC system in Irish Education) and poor scriptwriting to deal with major issues.[35]

1980s

RTÉ One had a major success with 1980s Strumpet City based on the novel by James Plunkett about the 1913 Dublin Lockout. It was successfully sold around the world to various countries including the USSR. The Year of The French was a major follow up period drama with twice the production budget as Strumpet City, however it was not as successful. The Year of The French was one of the many co-productions that RTÉ produced during the 1980s, it was co-produced with the UK's Channel 4 and France's FR2.

In 1983 RTÉ produced a World War II drama titled Caught in a Free State. The four-part series was set against the backdrop of Irish Neutrality during the Second World War. It surrounded the true stories of German Spies in Ireland. The series was a co-production with Channel 4. Other Channel 4/RTÉ co-productions from the 1980s include The Irish R.M. and Echoes.

In the mid-1980s RTÉ developed a sitcom called Leave It to Mrs O'Brien which centred on the housekeeper of a Parish Priest. It is often quoted as one of the comedies which shows that RTÉ cannot produce good comedy. The series was a critical and audience failure. RTÉ would not produce another sitcom until the mid-1990s, while being criticized for not commissioning another series that featured a Parish Priest Housekeeper.

In 1989, RTÉ returned with a new drama series based in Dublin city called Fair City. In 2010, the show has celebrated its 20th anniversary since it first broadcast. The show continues to air four nights a week on RTÉ One.

1990s

In 1993, RTÉ One began to broadcast TG4's soap Ros na Rún. The show initially broadcast for a short season each year. The show no-longer airs on RTÉ One, but instead airs each night on TG4. The show also airs on television in Scotland and America. In 1994 RTÉ broadcast Family by Roddy Doyle, a co-production with the BBC.

In 1993 RTÉ produced a sitcom set in a newspaper office called Extra! Extra! Read All About It! (also known as Extra! Extra!). It was poorly received, critics stating the scripts lacked any humour and that the direction was poor. Reviewing the programme for the Sunday Independent, writer Colm Tóibín called it "probably the worst programme RTÉ has ever shown".[36] The Irish Times' Brendan Glacken was equally scathing: "Speaking of Extra! Extra!, as I am afraid we still must, even seasoned RTÉ observers seem unable to answer the question why a series so pathetically weak should have been allowed to reach the screen at all".[37] The Irish Independent later listed it as one of the worst Irish TV shows ever.[38]

In the mid-1990s RTÉ return to sitcom with the development of Upwardly Mobile which ran for 3 seasons. The series was a critical failure but it often land in RTÉ top programmes each week. At the same time British station Channel 4 commissioned Father Ted, which RTÉ is often incorrectly accused of turning down. RTÉ would not return to sitcoms until 2001 when The Cassidys appeared on RTÉ Two this was also a failure however two other successive comedies appeared in the same year on RTÉ Two, Bachelors Walk and Paths to Freedom. RTÉ One's next comedy series would not appear until 2003 with the arrival of Killinaskully.

In the late 1990s RTÉ co-produced many period dramas based on novels by significant modern day Irish novelists, such as Falling for a Dancer and Amongst Women. They also produced the police procedural Making the Cut and its spin-off series DDU.

2000s

As a replacement for the axed rural soap Glenroe RTÉ commissioned On Home Ground, surrounding a rural GAA club.[39] The series was not well received and was replaced in 2003 by The Clinic. The Clinic was an award-winning primetime television medical drama series produced by Parallel Film Productions for RTÉ. The show ran for seven seasons between September 2003 to November 2009. The last episode aired on RTÉ One on Sunday, 15 November 2009. The show was so successful that it also aired in Finland, New Zealand, Australia, Iceland, Scotland and Portugal.

Since 2000 RTÉ has increased its output of specialized dramas. These drama's have discussed a broad range of issues such as the Irish Hepatitis C scandal in No Tears (2002)[40] which featured Academy Award Winner Brenda Fricker.

In 2003 RTÉ returned to comedy with the rural based Killinaskully series. The series was produced by Irish Comedian Pat Shortt. The series was a critical failure but according to one critic this was due to the rural/urban divide and "because TV critics tend to stand very firmly on one side of that gap, they have seldom attempted to understand the popularity of something so old-fashioned, predictable and lazy.".[41] The series was a huge audience success for the channel often getting over 500,000 every Sunday night, with its Christmas specials becoming some of Ireland's most watched TV programmes during its run.

In 2004 RTÉ co-produced with Denmark's TV2 a gritty drama series based on criminality in Dublin City. Proof aired for two seasons and starred Orla Brady. In 2006 RTÉ broadcast a fictional drama based on a nuclear fallout called Fallout. Following this another drama appeared on RTÉ One in September 2006, the docudrama about the Stardust disaster, entitled Stardust, to mark the 25th anniversary of the incident.

In 2007, RTÉ began the drama series Single-Handed. Three episodes of the series ran over the course of three years when ITV bought the rights to the show in 2009, which led to the co-production of the fourth series with Britain's ITV.

In 2007, RTÉ aired Damage a drama which focused on rape and sexual abuse. In 2008, RTÉ produced Whistleblower this drama highlighted irregular obstetric practices within Irish hospitals. Another drama in 2008 included Bitter Sweet. This drama follows the difficulties encountered by three female friends who undergo difficult changes to their respective lives.

In 2009 RTÉ commissioned a second Pat Shortt comedy titled Mattie.[42] Mattie initially centred on the move of a rural Garda to the big city, however the series received poor reviews and audience figures were lacklustre. RTÉ attempted to re-launch the show asSTG Mattie the following year this time keeping Garda Mattie in country surrounding and adding a laughter track.[43]

In June 2009 RTÉ broadcast Father & Son co-produced with ITV.

2010s

The 2010 Live Aid biopic When Harvey met Bobby (surrounding the relationship between Bob Geldof and Harvey Goldsmith) was co-produced with the BBC. Wild Decembers based on the novel by Edna O'Brien aired at Christmas 2010.[44]

In 2010 their drama series Raw moved from RTÉ Two to RTÉ One. RAW ran for 5 seasons with its final season airing in 2013. The series centred on a busy Dublin Restaurant.

The series Love/Hate (starring Aidan Gillen) detailing the lives of the Dublin's criminal underworld began in 2010. Love/Hate has since gone on to become one of Ireland most respected TV dramas, before ceasing production after 5 seasons in 2015.[45]

In 2011 RTÉ co-produced Brendan O'Carroll's Mrs. Brown's Boys with Boxpic and BBC Scotland for BBC One. The series airs first on RTÉ One as BBC One is largely available across Ireland.

The BBC Two detective drama The Fall starring Gillian Anderson was produced in association with RTÉ and aired on RTÉ One. RTÉ will also air Quirke a Dublin-based detective series, starring Gabriel Byrne and commissioned by the BBC and The Irish Film Board.

A drama surrounding the disappearance of a young girl aired in 2014, titled Amber. It is directed by Thaddeus O'Sullivan and stars Eva Birthistle and David Murray.[46] Due to financial difficulties at RTÉ the series broadcast date was postponed for 2 years, the four-part series aired across 4 consecutive days. The four-part caused controversy with viewers and critics due its open ending.

It was reported that a fifth season of Single Handed was to be produced by RTÉ and ITV, however the series did not get the required funding. A drama surrounding the Irish banking crisis has yet to be announced.[47]

A series surrounding the life of former Taoiseach Charlie Haughey is expected in 2015. Aidan Gillen will play the title role in Haughey.

For the first time in nearly 30 years RTÉ returned to the Television play in 2014. Three Irish writers Fiona Looney, Deirdre Purcell and Pat McCabe wrote 3 different plays for Play Next Door. The writers were sent to different parts of the country and were told to set their work in a building in the locality. A documentary followed each of the writers as they lived in the towns, it was followed by the play.

2020s

Entertainment

Chat shows

RTÉ's flagship chat show is The Late Late Show. It has aired on the channel since the summer of 1962. It is the second longest-running chat show and Europe's longest-running chat show. From 1962 until 1999 it was presented by Gay Byrne. In September 1999, Pat Kenny took over the role and after hosting nine seasons as Late Late host he stepped down to host a new political programme. In September 2009, Ryan Tubridy took over as host. In its early years the show was known for its controversies. Most Irish chat shows continue to use a similar formula to The Late Late Show, most shows are live and contain a mix of serious and entertaining interviews.

In the late 1970s and early 1980s the biggest rival to The Late Late Show was The Live Mike, hosted by Mike Murphy. The show was a mix of comedy sketches and interviews. Mike Murphy decided to leave the show and it was replaced by Saturday Live in the mid-1980s, the series had a new host each week. It in turn was replaced by Kenny Live hosted by Pat Kenny, who had been a guest presenter on Saturday Live. Kenny Live was more entertainment focused then The Late Late Show, however towards the end of the show Pat Kenny would do a one-to-one interview on topical subjects, e.g. Families of missing people.

Most summers RTÉ provide a chat show. They have included Limelight hosted by Carrie Crowley, Good Grief Moncreiff hosted by Sean Moncreiff, BiBi hosted by Bibi Baskin, Kennedy hosted by Mary Kennedy and the most recent series Saturday Night with Miriam with Miriam O'Callaghan. The show is well known for its wide variety of guests, which often include musicians, who usually perform on the show. The Duckworth Lewis Method made their television debut on Saturday Night with Miriam in 2009's season opener.[48]

Before hosting The Late Late Show, Ryan Tubridy hosted his own Saturday night chat show between 2004 and 2009, called Tubridy Tonight. After Pat Kenny left Kenny Live RTÉ produced a similar series to the 1980s Saturday Live this time called Saturday Night Live again with a different host each week, the series last until 2002. In 2003 The Late Late Show went into competition with Dunphy Live on TV3, however it only lasted until December 2003. Though RTÉ had stopped producing a Saturday Night chatshow that year, TV3 decided to air Dunphy Live on a Friday Night.

RTÉ produced two pilot shows for Saturday Night in 2010. The Saturday Night Show (2010–2015) and Tonight with Craig Doyle (2010). Both of these shows are aimed to replace the highly successful Tubridy Tonight which ended in 2009,

Hosted by Brendan O'Connor called The Saturday Night Show it was given an initial run of 8 weeks, it now airs every Saturday night.

Craig Doyle was also given his own chat show.[49] It replaced The Saturday Night Show. Tonight with Craig Doyle and ran on RTÉ One from 18 April 2010 for 8 weeks.[50]

In 2011 Gay Byrne returned with For One Night Only. It started with an hour-long interview with boyband Westlife, which included many of their hits, similar episodes included Imelda May and Christy Moore.

In 2013 Imelda May returned for her own music show The Imelda May Show.

Game shows/quiz shows

In the 1960s and 1970s RTÉ ran the Quicksilver quiz show presented by Bunny Carr. The show would tour the country and visit different towns. The contestants were picked at random to answer the questions, due to this random selection process the show is fondly remembered for questions such as "What the term for a male bee?" and the answer "a wasp?". It also coined an Irish phrase "stop the lights", usually stated when something is surprising.

In the 1980s RTÉ produced game shows like Play the Game, and Gerry Ryan's Secrets and quiz shows "Murphy's Micro-Quiz-M" (hosted by Mike Murphy), Where in the World? (hosted by Theresa Lowe), Rapid Roulette (hosted by Maxi) and Know Your Sport (hosted by George Hamilton).

Since 1989 RTÉ have produced a game show with the Irish National Lottery. Winning Streak was the first such show originally hosted by Mike Murphy, who had had previous success with his chat show The Live Mike and the Irish version of Candid Camera. He had also present Mike's Micro Quiz a family quiz show that included a "hi-tech" games machine. Winning Steak started off as a half-hour show on Friday nights in the late 1980s and by the mid-1990 was an hour-long Saturday night game show. In the mid-1990s Winning Streak was joined by other National Lottery game shows including Millionaire and Fame and Fortune hosted by Marty Whelan, Telly Bingo hosted by Liz Bonnin.

In the 1990s RTÉ had international success with The Lyrics Board, while it was derided by the critics the format was sold in many European countries. The show was originally presented by Aonghus McAnally during its initially run and in the 2000s by Linda Martin. Quiz shows included Challenging Times (hosted by Kevin Myres) and Dodge The Question (hosted by Jonathan Philbin Bowman). The 1990s saw RTÉ's version of Talkabout hosted by Ian Dempsey and later by Alan Hughes.

After Gay Byrne's decision to leave The Late Late Show, he was brought back by the station to host the Irish version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire however after two seasons the show was dropped as RTÉ were unable to find a sponsor after Vodafone Eircell pulled its sponsorship, the producers (Tyrone Productions) and RTÉ were in discussions with the National Lottery for a scratch card version of the show, ironically the National Lottery had defended the use of the term Millionaire a number of years previously due to its scratch card and TV game show Millionaire hosted by Marty Whelan for RTÉ. RTÉ One broadcast two editions of the Irish version of Test the Nation presented by Miriam O'Callaghan in 2006 and 2007.

Music

  • RTÉ One has shown many Irish traditional music shows including The Pure Drop and Come West Along The Road.
  • Number 1 was a pop music quiz show from the 1980s and they also aired Top of the Pops.
  • During the 1980s they had several live music shows with famous Irish stars of the time including The Sandy Kelly Show.
  • In the late 1980s and early 1990s Marty Whelan hosted a popular talent search called GFI: Go For It. In the mid-1990s RTÉ co-produced a talent series with BBC Northern Ireland called Let Me Entertain You hosted by Gerry Ryan, a 16-year-old Samantha Mumba was one of the finalists.
  • RTÉ One has also several documentaries about Irish Country Music and the Showband era entitled A Little Bit Country/Showband, hosted and produced by Shay Healey. In 2009 they broadcast All Ireland Choir Competition 2009.

Reality TV

Since the start of the 2000s RTÉ have produced several Reality TV programmes for RTÉ One. In 2001, RTÉ One broadcast the successful Popstars format to find Ireland's next top pop band. The eventual winners were the band members of Six, including on Nadine Coyle, however due to her age at the time she had to be dropped from the band, and went on to appear in Popstars: The Rivals on ITV1 becoming a member of the girl band Girls Aloud.[51] Due to the success in the Popstars format RTÉ set about looking for a new series for 2002, You're a Star was a similar show to American Idol and The X Factor, running from 2002 to 2008, during which they select acts to go to the Eurovision Song Contest.[52] In 2008 it was replaced by the All Ireland Talent Show.[53] The All Ireland Talent Show has since been replaced by the international Singing format The Voice of Ireland which begins on RTÉ One in January 2012. In 2010 they broadcast Fame: The Musical a reality TV talent search for stars of the stage version of the highly successful film and TV series Fame.[54]

Other reality shows include two seasons (2001 and 2002) of Treasure Island similar in format to Survivor. Senator Mark Daly appeared in the second series, coming third overall.[55] Cabin Fever (2003) which had a group of people set sail around the Irish coast, this caused controversy when the ship ran aground halfway through the series.[56]

RTÉ One has also produce celebrity versions of their reality TV shows. Charity You're a Star, Celebrity Farm and Fáilte Towers have all gained respectable audiences but critics have been less than impressed. RTÉ's most successful celebrity reality TV is The Restaurant.

Factual

Garda Patrol ran for a number of years on RTÉ One. It was a fifteen-minute weekly show asking for help with crimes from the public. In the early 1990s RTÉ revamped the show as a monthly hour-long show called Crime Line, hosted by David Harvey and Marian Finucane[57] (Towards the end of the series was hosted by Anne Doyle). In the mid-2000s RTÉ replaced CrimeLine with a similar show Crime Call. Crime Call is presented by Anne Cassin and Con Murphy.[58]

  • Radharc (an Irish term for view, vision, spectacle or sight) aired from the 1960s and the 1990s. They were documentaries filmed by Catholic priests. The series produced 400 documentaries which focused on some regional stories but mainly international stories about Catholic Missionaries around the world and world events. The series came about during the 1950s as public discussion centred on the new television services. The documentaries all took a religious angle on events.[59] The Irish Film Institute (IFI) are the custodians of the Radharc documentaries.[60]
  • To the Waters and the Wild
  • Waterways
  • Who Do You Think You Are?
  • Blood of the Irish

History

  • Reeling in the Years is one of RTÉ most popular history strands, it provides a history of Ireland from 1962 to 2009, it began as part of RTÉ Autumn 1999 schedule as Reeling in the Years 1980s, 1990s in 2000, 1970s in 2002, 1960s in 2004, 2000s in 2010, 2010s most recently in 2021 it's possible a future series on the 2020s will be made in 2030. It was archive clips from Irish and international archives showing the big events of the world from an Irish perspective including 2 Eurovision wins, 3 Irish general elections in one year, the Recession, Migration, DeLorean Motor Company, GUBU, Ronald Reagan's visit to Ireland, All Ireland Championship wins etc. 1960–1969, 1970–1979 and 1990–1999 were all broadcast, events included the Dublin/Monaghan bombings, U2's first TV appearance, Slane Concerts, the axing of The Riordans, Riverdance, Miley and Fidelma's hay shed love in Glenroe, Twin Peaks to more serious news such as the Omagh bombings, The Good Friday Agreement, The resignation of the Minister for Foreign Affairs Ray Burke and the inauguration of president Mary Robinson etc.
  • True Lives
  • Hidden Histories

Arts

  • Arts Lives is a series of arts documentaries produced by independent producers for RTÉ. They may also be co-funded by other broadcasters from around Europe. Some of the documentaries include: The Riordans: Tea, Taboos & Tractors about the successful rural soap opera, John O'Conor's Beethoven Boot Camp, Hugh Leonard: Odd Man In, Patrick Collins: Through Sligo Eyes, Graham Linehan – Funny Business and Ronnie Drew – September Song.[61]
  • The View was a weekly arts and cultural review programme broadcast each Tuesday night up until 2011. It was original broadcast on RTÉ Two as Later on 2.

Young people's programmes

Up to 1988 the majority of RTÉ's children's programmes were aired on RTÉ One. In the early years these shows included Dáithí Lacha an Irish Language animated series about a duck. In the 1970s they produced Wanderly Wagon which was developed for RTÉ by Eugene Lambert and a spin-off show in the 1980s called Fortycoats & Co. however Eugene Lambert is on the record as saying that he was not involved and that RTÉ just rehashed old Wanderly Wagon stories. The 1980s saw RTÉ's first Saturday morning children's strand called Anything Goes, this was followed by Action Station Saturday and Pajo's Junkbox. In the 1990s their Saturday mornings included Pajo's The Whole Shabang and Scratch Saturday which included The Fanta Roadshow Chart with Andy Ruane, various changes took place on Saturday mornings during the 1990s with the final RTÉ One children's morning strand coming from RTÉ Cork called The Swamp. In the late 1990s all children's weekend programming was fully moved to Network 2 with T/X and The Disney Club. Dempsey's Den aired on the channel from 1986 to 1988, Zig and Zag made their debuts on RTÉ One. Since 1988 the majority of RTÉ's children programming airs on its sister channel RTÉ Two. RTÉ Two provide different strands of programming tailored at different age groups these include: RTÉjr (1- to 6-year-olds), TRTÉ (7- to 15-year-olds), TwoTube (16- to 22-year-olds). Since 2011 RTÉ has a dedicated service for preschoolers called RTÉjr.

Every Saturday night RTÉ One at 18:30 airs The Big Big Movie this strand features movies which a tailored towards a family audience.

Daytime

In the early 1980s, RTÉ began testing daytime television for audiences on RTÉ One. This was a major commitment since RTÉ Two was failing to gain audience that it required. Their first daytime show was hosted by Thelma Mansfield – one of their regular continuity announcers – Good Afternoon was a mix of live interviews, music, children's television and soap operas.[62]

In 1986, RTÉ debuted its new afternoon show which featured a mixture of daytime chat and children's television. In September the channel aired Live at 3 broadcasting from 15:00 each weekday. This was followed by a new children's series Dempsey's Den.[63] Live at 3 was presented by Derek Davis and Thelma Mansfield from 1986 to 1997. It included a broad range of topics (healthcare, cookery, DIY, fashion and culture). It was a major departure for the daytime schedule and in an interview with TV Now Derek Davis described how many other European broadcasters were travelling over to Ireland to visit this mix genre daytime TV chat show.

In 1997 with the departure of Derek Davis, Live at 3 was merged with another TV series called 12 to 1. 12 to 1 was similar in style to Live at 3 only it concentrated on Light chat with hosts Marty Whelan and Ciana Campbell. Ciana Campbell had prior to this tested out a live afternoon phone in show (called Over to You), similar in format to RTÉ Radio's successfully Liveline, this eventually led to 12 to 1.[64]

In the late 1990s Marty Whelan, Ciana Campbell and Thelma Mansfield all remained as part of the daytime TV line-up and featured on PM Live. In 1999, Thelma Mansfield retired from RTÉ to concentrate on her art career.[65] This later led to the demise of PM Live, which was replaced in September 1999, with Open House.

Open House was the first time that RTÉ had an independent producer produce their daytime TV service. Tyrone Productions produced the show in the RTÉ studios and it was hosted by Mary Kennedy and Marty Whelan from 1999 to 2003.

In 2004, RTÉ revamped their daytime schedule and axed Open House and replaced it with two new shows, The Afternoon Show and The Big Bite. The Big Bite was an unusual departure for RTÉ's daytime schedule as it had heavier content than previous shows which aired in this time-slot, it was hosted by economist David McWilliams. The Big Bite was replaced with Seoige and O'Shea, which was also produced by Tyrone Productions. Joe O'Shea and Grainne Seoige presented the show together for 2 seasons until Joe O'Shea left in 2007, he was replaced by Grainne's sister Síle Seoige and the show was rename Seoige. Seoige lasted one season and was replaced by an extended version of The Afternoon Show produced by Green Inc Productions for RTÉ.

The Afternoon Show was first presented by Anna Nolan, Blathnaid Ni Chofaigh and Sheana Keane. Anna Nolan left the show after a year to focus on more serious TV such as RTÉ's Would You Believe series of documentaries. Blathanid and Sheana both worked on the show together for a number of years until 2008 (when it was reported they had had a falling out[66]), various presenters stepping into either Blathanid's or Sheana's shoes, with the final series being presented by Sheana and Maura Derrane (former Ireland AM presenter).

In 2010, RTÉ One revamped its afternoon schedule, which will debut in September 2010. RTÉ set about seeking tenders from independent producers, as a consequence of this process RTÉ axed The Afternoon Show.[67] Two new afternoon shows began in September 2010, 4 Live and The Daily Show. 4 Live was presented by Maura Derrane (former co-presenter of The Afternoon Show), while The Daily Show was presented by TG4 Weather Man Dáithí Ó Sé and former TV3 News presenter Claire Byrne. Both shows were broadcast from 16:00 to 17:45 GMT.[68] Both new daytime shows are produced by Green Inc. for RTÉ.[69] The programmes were axed in March 2012. In October 2012 RTÉ moved their main afternoon programmes to Cork. Today is hosted by Maura Derrane and Dáithí Ó Sé, while Claire Byrne moved to Prime Time and RTÉ Radio 1's Saturday with Claire Byrne. On Friday's Blathnaid Ni Chofaigh and Norah Casey (Dragon's Den Ireland).

In January 2013 RTÉ launched their first morning TV news service on RTÉ One and RTÉ News Now Morning Edition, the programme airs from 9 am to 11 am Monday to Friday. Morning Edition is presented by Keelin Shanley.

In 2017 Stellify Media produced Goodbye House, a property show in which three siblings compete to find the perfect home for their parents.

Lifestyle

In the 1980s RTÉ One's lifestyle programming consisted of shows such as

  • Check Up – A weekly health show
  • Head 2 Toe – A weekly fashion series
  • See Here – A weekly consumers show
  • Family Matters – A weekly issue based show for parents, hosted by Eamon Lawlor and Caroline Murphy.

Much of RTÉ's lifestyle output was produced in-house until the 1990s when Independent Producers began producing shows such as: -

  • About the House – An Educational/Lifestyle show about home renovations
  • Ear to the Ground – A weekly Agricultural magazine show
  • Beyond The Hall Door – A studio based Interior design show by the 2000s it had left the studio to do up homes
  • Bon Voyage – A travel show
  • Darina Allen – A cookery Show

Most of RTÉ's Lifestyle programming is air Monday to Friday between 19:00 and 21:00, and repeated on Saturday and Sunday mornings. Their current set of lifestyle programmes include About the House, Showhouse, Heat and Rachel Allen: Bakes.

Imported programming

1961–1969

RTÉ One has always relied on a certain amount of programming from abroad and they have also always been under pressure from UK TV channels to provide programming from other countries. The 1960s on RTÉ is characterized by American and British imports such as Annie Oakley, Everglades, Have Gun Will Travel, The Donna Reed Show, The Adventures of Robin Hood, Batman, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., The Andy Williams Show, The Dick Van Dyke Show, Robinson Crusoe, Lucy Show, Dr. Finlay's Casebook, The World Around Us, The World of Wooster and Sherlock Holmes. Children's programming at this time consisted of such shows as The Road Runner Show, The Flintstones, Skippy and Quick Draw McGraw. In 1963 they also broadcast Italian lessons Parliamo Italiano.[70]

1970–1979

RTÉ began expanding its schedule during the 1970s with educational and children's programming being broadcast from 11 am. Children's shows imported for the channel included Tarzan, Modern Madcaps, The Road Runner Show, Land of the Giants, Apple's Way, Babar, Noddy, Sesame Street, Gemini Man, Clue Club and Scooby-Doo, while educational programming included Education: Zarabanda, First Steps in First Aid and German Lesson other daytime shows included South Riding, The Pallisers and Thrill Seekers. Prime time imports included Lights Out, The Spanish Farm, The Brady Bunch, Bridget Loves Bernie, Fawlty Towers, Little House on the Prairie, "The Waltons", "Poldark" The Muppet Show, Anne of the Thousand Days, Midnight Is a Place, Are You Being Served?.[71] In 1978 RTÉ One began broadcasting many UK TV show such as ITV's Sale of the Century and Match of the Day which was simulcast with the BBC. RTÉ Two began broadcasting on 2 November 1978.

1980–1989

During the 1980s many of the language courses on during daytime hours moved to the weekend, children's was presented first as Good Afternoon with many adult daytime shows mixed in, until 1986 when Dempsey's Den started to broadcast, imports for Children included The World of Jules Verne, Ludwig, Yogi's Treasure Hunt, Danger Bay, Arthur and the Square Knights of the Round Table, Supergran, European Folk Tales, Kaboodle and The Real Ghostbusters. Other daytime shows included Upstairs Downstairs and Emmerdale Farm. Prime time imports included American shows such as The Cheryl Ladd Special, Here's Lucy, Ride on Stranger, Falcon Crest, Miami Vice, Benson", Dallas", Magnum, P.I., The Paul Anka Show, Remington Steele, Murder, She Wrote, Spenser for Hire, The Cosby Show, The Twilight Zone, The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd, Evening Extra, Turning Point, On the Town, Our House, The Ray Bradbury Theatre. British imports included Are You Being Served?, Codename Icarus, The Paper Lads, Dempsey and Makepeace, Tomorrow's World and Executive Stress.[72]

In 1988 RTÉ Two re-branded as Network 2 which saw RTÉ move many of its children's and imported shows over to Network 2.

1990–1999

Children's shows remained on RTÉ 1 on Saturday morning for most of the 1990s imports included DuckTales, Batman, Family Ties, The Disney Hour, Katts and Dog, Nellie the Elephant and The Pink Panther Show. Daytime TV consisted of repeats and daytime soaps such as Little House on the Prairie, The New Adventures of Black Beauty, CHiPs, Delia Smith's Cookery Course, Emmerdale, Knots Landing, A Country Practice, Perry Mason, Carson's Law, The Love Boat, G. P., The Sullivans, Santa Barbara, Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased), Take the High Road, Forever Green and Highway to Heaven. American prime time show imported at the time included Star Trek: The Next Generation, Mancuso, F.B.I., The Cosby Show, St. Elsewhere, MacGyver, Masquerade, Father Dowling Mysteries, Dallas, Midnight Caller, Home Improvement, Space: Above and Beyond, JAG, Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman, RoboCop, Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, ER and The Practice. British shows broadcast included Bergerac, Agatha Christie's Poirot, After Henry, The Ruth Rendell Mysteries, An Audience with... Victoria Wood, Lovejoy, Hearts and Minds, Ballykissangel and from 1992 to 2001 Coronation Street. Educational programming at the time moved to Sunday morning including Espana Viva, A Vous La France and Russian Language and People.[73] 28 January 1991 saw the last episode of cult favourite Twin Peaks broadcast on RTÉ 1.[74]

2000–2009

Since the late 1990s RTÉ One's prime time schedule is made up of nearly 100% Irish programming, some exceptions include EastEnders, The Midweek Movie, The Big Big Movie and with a few classic repeats intermittently such as Fawlty Towers and Only Fools and Horses. RTÉ One's other daytime imports are made up of soap operas (such as the Australian soaps Neighbours and Home and Away, the New Zealand soap Shortland Street, the British soaps Doctors and EastEnders), American detective dramas (including the highly repeatable Murder, She Wrote) and since 2001 they have broadcast American daytime chat shows (including The Doctors and Doctor Phil, they also broadcast Oprah but that is now shown on TV3). American dramas broadcast from 2000 to 2009 included ER, The Practice, Prison Break, Damages, Shark, Angel, Two and a Half Men, Medium, Mad Men, and The West Wing. British dramas Spooks and Waking the Dead have also aired on the channel.[75] During the 2000s RTÉ broadcast the ITV soap The Bill over two half-hour episodes Monday to Friday at 17:30, rather than the original hour-long episodes. RTÉ One also broadcast the revived ITV soap, Crossroads.[76]

2010–2019

RTÉ One launched its 2010 schedule with The Mentalist as a replacement for the long running Sunday night drama ER. Other imports included Who Do You Think You Are? both the British and American versions which coincided with their broadcast of the Irish version. On 4 August 2010, RTÉ launched its schedule which included imports Mad Men and Masterchef Australia.[77] RTÉ One also broadcast Packed to the Rafters, The Bill, Medium and McLeod's Daughters. Daytime repeats now include Desperate Housewives, The Good Wife and Brothers & Sisters. New episodes of The Good Wife move to RTÉ One in 2013. A&E's Longmire began airing in 2013. Late Night TV consists largely of imported programming such as Australian drama serials Rush, Blue Heelers and Tangle.

2020–present

Mainly Covid-19 to start the new decade. New look planned Autumn 2022. New indents for the 1st time since November 3rd 2006 on April 25, 2023.

On-air identity

In 1966, the radio and television stations adopted the common brand Radio Telifís Éireann in line with the renamed broadcasting authority,[78] and the ident used the acronym RTE, with no síneadh fada diacritic over the E of Éireann. The 1995 logo was the first to read RTÉ rather than RTE.

A new appearance and ident of RTÉ One (including the "ONE" in a new font) launched on 1 January 2014. The channel is now referred to as 'RTÉ ONE HD' on Saorview.[79]

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  • McCaughren, Samantha (9 February 2006). ”Irish Viewers to get a '6' Sense Soon!” Irish Independent, Business p. 10. Accessed 10 December 2009.

External links

  • RTÉ One at RTÉ.ie

rtÉ, rtÉ, radio, station, rtÉ, radio, rte1, redirects, here, channel, sister, service, rtÉ2, highways, called, route, list, highways, numbered, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, . For the RTE radio station see RTE Radio 1 RTE1 redirects here For the channel s sister service see RTE2 For highways called Route 1 see List of highways numbered 1 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources RTE One news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message RTE One Irish RTE a hAon is an Irish free to air flagship television channel owned and operated by Raidio Teilifis Eireann RTE It is the most popular and most watched television channel in the country and was launched as Telefis Eireann on 31 December 1961 it was renamed RTE in 1966 and it was renamed as RTE 1 upon the launch of RTE 2 in 1978 It is funded partly by the government s licence fee the remainder of the funding is provided by commercial advertising Because RTE is funded partly by the licence fee it shows considerably fewer advertisements than most other channels available in Ireland and Northern Ireland RTE1CountryIrelandBroadcast areaIreland amp Northern IrelandWorldwide online HeadquartersDonnybrook DublinProgrammingLanguage s EnglishIrishIrish Sign LanguagePicture format1080i 16 9 HDTV 2013 576i 16 9 SDTV 2005 576i 4 3 SDTV 1961 2005 Timeshift serviceRTE One 1OwnershipOwnerRaidio Teilifis Eireann ultimately owned by Government of Ireland Key peopleGeorge Dixon Channel Controller Sister channelsRTE2RTEjrRTE NewsHistoryLaunched31 December 1961Former namesTelefis Eireann 1961 1966 RTE 1966 1978 RTE 1 1978 1995 LinksWebsiterte ie tvAvailabilityTerrestrialSaorviewChannel 1 HD Channel 11 1 Freeview Northern Ireland only Channel 54Streaming mediaVirgin TV AnywhereWatch live Ireland only RTE PlayerWatch live Available depending on rights Sky GoWatch Live Ireland only RTE One is available to 98 of the Irish population in HD on the Saorview DTT service It is also available in Northern Ireland via Saorview Freeview Sky and cable provider Virgin Media The channel is also available online through RTE Player Contents 1 History 2 RTE One HD 3 RTE One 1 4 Budget 5 Programming 5 1 2015 2016 season 5 2 News and current affairs 5 3 Diversity 5 3 1 Claracha Gaeilge 5 3 2 Education 5 4 Regional 5 5 Drama and comedy 5 5 1 1960s 5 5 2 1970s 5 5 3 1980s 5 5 4 1990s 5 5 5 2000s 5 5 6 2010s 5 5 7 2020s 5 6 Entertainment 5 6 1 Chat shows 5 6 2 Game shows quiz shows 5 6 3 Music 5 6 4 Reality TV 5 7 Factual 5 7 1 History 5 7 2 Arts 5 8 Young people s programmes 5 9 Daytime 5 10 Lifestyle 5 11 Imported programming 5 11 1 1961 1969 5 11 2 1970 1979 5 11 3 1980 1989 5 11 4 1990 1999 5 11 5 2000 2009 5 11 6 2010 2019 5 11 7 2020 present 6 On air identity 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 External linksHistory EditRTE One began life as Telefis Eireann in 1961 1 It was renamed simply as RTE in 1966 upon the renaming of the Radio Eireann Authority as Radio Telefis Eireann and became RTE 1 upon the launch of RTE 2 in 1978 2 Originally the station broadcast in black and white throughout the country using the European 625 line standard as well as on the 405 line television system in the northern and eastern parts of the country since the mid 50s many people in these areas already had 405 line TV sets receiving BBC and UTV HTV transmissions from Wales and Northern Ireland 3 A standards conversion unit was used to provide the 405 line service but when this electronic device failed optical conversion was used reportedly by directing a 405 line camera at a 625 line monitor 3 The first programme to be pre recorded for the new television service was The School Around the Corner an interview quiz show created and presented by Paddy Crosbie and produced by James Plunkett 4 PAL colour transmissions began in 1968 and the first programme made and transmitted in colour was John Hume s Derry The first outside broadcast in colour for RTE Television was the 1971 Railway Cup Finals Gaelic Athletic Association and soon after that the Eurovision Song Contest 1971 from Dublin 5 In the 1970s the studios in RTE s Television Centre started being equipped for colour the first was the news studio in 1974 studio 2 in 1975 and finally studio 1 the largest studio used for productions such as The Late Late Show in 1976 5 RTE was also the sole Irish TV channel until 1978 when RTE 2 known as Network 2 between 1988 and 2004 was created The Irish language station TG4 began in 1996 as Teilifis na Gaeilge TnaG 6 Since 1998 RTE One also competes with Virgin Media One formerly known as TV3 7 Since it began broadcasting RTE One has competed with BBC One and UTV from Northern Ireland and in the 1980s RTE began competing with other satellite and cable channels that are widely available across Ireland through cable subscription services due to the high take up of cable TV from pan European and UK channels since the 1960s and the continued roll out of MMDS and satellite during the 1980s and 1990s From 1961 RTE Television would only broadcast from 17 35 until around 23 30 during Winter months In 1975 this changed slightly with transmission starting at around 15 30 and concluding around midnight 00 00 24 hour broadcasts began in the late 1990s In 1988 RTE One launched a schedule with a new news bulletin at 13 00 Currently RTE One does not offer breakfast television but from 2013 to 2014 the station aired an early morning current affairs show called Morning Edition which was also simulcast on RTE News Now Virgin Media One is currently the only indigenous broadcaster in direct competition for this early morning market with Ireland AM since 1999 RTE One during the Olympics and special breaking news or election coverage will provide a special bulletin in the mornings On 6 July 2017 RTE One extended its on air hours starting at 6 00am as opposed to the later 6 20 am as previously RTE One HD EditRTE One HD was launched on 21 October 2013 originally in upscaled HD following the launch of a new Saorview multiplex Native HD broadcasts began on 16 December 2013 8 RTE One is now broadcast solely in High Definition HD on the national DTT service Saorview with the Standard Definition simulcast ending on 2 April 2014 However RTE still provides a Standard Definition SD output of RTE One to pay television operators on cable and satellite for those subscribers who still have equipment that does not support HD RTE Television decided to launch the new HD service just before the Christmas period to draw audiences attention to the new service available to viewers RTE have started to convert their main production studios to HD the first being studio 5 in 2012 which is used mainly for sports productions Any programmes still made in standard definition are upscaled on the channel and it is intended that the vast majority of the channel s output will be in high definition in due course RTE One in SD continues to be available on Virgin Media Ireland until more of their customers have upgraded to HD Sky Ireland launched the channel on 14 December 2015 as part of a new long term partnership with RTE however the channel is not available on Sky UK s Northern Ireland EPG In response to queries RTE currently advises Northern Ireland Sky subscribers to contact Sky on the matter whereas Sky replies that it s an issue for RTE as to whether they make their HD channel available 9 RTE One 1 EditA timeshift channel for RTE One RTE One 1 was launched on 27 May 2011 10 and shares channel space with RTEjr 11 The channel was made available on Saorview from its launch UPC Ireland replaced City Channel with RTE One 1 on 13 March 2012 Reeling in the Years does not broadcast on this channel due to music rights restrictions It was referred to as RTE One Deferred in the Easy TV commercial DTT multiplex application Easy TV was made up of RTE NL and UPC Ireland 12 RTE had also plans to create a third channel called RTE Three along with RTE One Deferred as reported in the Sunday Business Post in May 2008 13 RTE Three was dropped for the alternative RTE Plus RTEjr RTE Plus would have initially been a time shift channel for RTE One s prime time schedule starting each night at 19 00 after RTEjr ends for the night This Phase 1 of RTE plus was to begin broadcasting in May 2011 Phase 2 of RTE Plus was to be made up of an entirely different schedule to that of RTE One RTE had hoped that this would be made available in May 2012 14 Minister Pat Carey gave the go ahead for RTE One 1 for a maximum of 4 years at which point it will be reviewed He did not give permission for the second phase in the channel as he was advised by the BAI that it may cause problems for commercial service providers such as TV3 As part of a new long term partnership with Sky RTE One 1 launched on Sky channel 115 on 14 December 2015 moving RTE2 HD down to 278 15 On 1 May 2018 the 1 channels and the Entertainment amp Documentaries channel sections were moved to 201 299 to coincide with the non 1 channel For example RTE One is on channel 101 and RTE One 1 is on 201 16 When launched RTE One 1 broadcast from 19 00 to approximately 02 00 On 15 February 2019 RTE One 1 began broadcasting 24 hours a day to coincide with the launch of RTE2 1 17 Budget EditReferencesThe following figures were issued by RTE as part of their Annual reports 2008 18 and 2012 19 Income Income Type 2008 2012Licence Fee 81 992 000 56 139 000Commercial Income 106 496 000 65 351 000Total Income 188 488 000 121 490 000Total Costs Cost Type 2008 2012Network and other related costs 17 773 000 14 362 000Sales Costs 5 278 000 not givenAcquired Programming 13 614 000 14 897 000Irish Productions 147 999 000 100 478 000Total Costs 184 664 000 129 737 000Profit and Loss 2008 2012 3 824 000 8 247 000 Breakdown of Irish Productions Production House 2008 2012RTE 93 454 000 70 448 000Independent Producers 54 545 000 30 030 000Total 147 999 000 100 478 000The table below outlines RTE One s total in house and commissioned programming by genre in 2008 and 2012 Genre 2008 2012Factual 42 951 000 27 919 000Drama 38 776 000 21 425 000Entertainment 23 918 000 18 073 000Music 2 215 000 1 311 000News Current Affairs and Weather 38 834 000 30 866 000Sport 1 305 000 884 000Young Peoples ProgrammingTotal 147 999 000 100 478 000Programming Edit2015 2016 season Edit On 13 August 2015 RTE One revealed its 2015 2016 line up As part of the new schedule two new dramas will debut on the channel these include the four part drama series Clean Break 2015 and five part drama series Rebellion 2016 20 The 2015 2016 schedule has a stronger focus on documentaries and a lesser focus on domestic drama when compared to previous seasons 21 RTE One airs a variety of programmes each week both homegrown programming and imported programming A typical week of programming on RTE One would be as follows On Sunday night RTE s flagship talent show The Voice of Ireland airs at 18 30 with the results show following soap opera Fair City at 20 30 Dragon s Den airs at 21 30 on Sunday nights On Monday nights at 21 35 there is a questions and answers style show called Claire Byrne Live hosted by Claire Byrne The long running chat show The Late Late Show hosted by Ryan Tubridy airs Friday nights from 21 35 it is the longest running chat show in the world On Saturday night game show The Million Euro Challenge airs at around 20 15 The Saturday Night Show airs at around 21 45 similar to The Late Late Show it has a variety of celebrity guests and music performances Irish soap opera Fair City airs four times a week on RTE One it airs Sundays at 20 30 Tuesdays and Thursdays at 20 00 and Wednesdays at 19 30 Fair City is similar to the British format for soap operas such as Coronation Street RTE One also airs British soap opera EastEnders weekly at the same times as BBC One RTE One also air a host of films throughout the week including the midweek movie on Wednesday at 21 30 and the big big movie usually a children s film Saturdays at 18 30 RTE One also air news coverage throughout the week including a 13 00 18 00 and 21 00 news broadcast every day News and current affairs Edit Main article RTE News and Current Affairs RTE News and Current Affairs provides all of RTE One s News and Current Affairs Programming RTE News and current affairs television programmes include News programming Morning Edition RTE News One O Clock RTE News Six One RTE News Nine O Clock RTE News Headlines broadcast at regular intervals in the morning early afternoon and at night Nuacht RTE RTE News with SigningCurrent Affairs Programming Prime Time Prime Time Investigates Claire Bryne Live The Week in Politics Nationwide One To One Oireachtas Report Euro ReportRTE News and Current Affairs coverage of all major political events such as General Elections Budgets Local and European Elections and Referendums Since 2000 RTE has covered the US Presidential Elections live It also covers major political stories from the Northern Irish Assembly including elections Diversity Edit RTE as a public service broadcaster is committed to providing awareness about the diverse communities found within Ireland RTE aims to providing access to different groups through different mediums RTE Diversity provides awareness of Ireland s multicultural society From 2002 RTE produced a weekly multicultural show called Mono 22 The show aired between 2002 and 2005 and had a similar format as Nationwide but focused more on multicultural issues and had reports from all parts of the country The show was produced by Kairos Communications for RTE 22 and was presented by Shalini Sinha RTE Diversity commissions a monthly show for individuals with hearing impairments or deafness Hands On originally called Sign of the Times airs every Sunday morning The show is presented using Irish Sign Language The show is also subtitled using Irish or English subtitles In 2009 the number of Hands On programmes were reduced by 60 from 20 to 7 23 Diversity has also been showcased on RTE Dramas The Riordans and Glenroe featured several characters from the Irish Travelling Community Fair City and The Clinic have showcased a broader range of diversity which includes members of the Roma community LGBT movement African heritage Eastern Europe and other ethnic minorities groups in Ireland In April 2010 RTE revealed a new multicultural programme which will air from March 2011 The show has a budget of 45 000 per episode 24 Claracha Gaeilge Edit RTE produced the television series Buntus Cainte in 1967 which together with the corresponding series of books aimed to promote the learning of the Irish Language The television series was presented by Maire O Neill and Aileen Geoghegan 25 In the early 1990s they produced a similar show with BBC Northern Ireland called Now You re Talking which used the Ulster dialect of Irish In they early 2000s they produced a new series called Turas Teanga which was presented by newsreader Sharon Ni Bheolain 26 During Seachtain na Gaeilge Irish Language Week continuity is provided through the Irish Language During this week they also have a range of shows that promote the learning or use of the Irish language In 2010 they produced An Cor with Fiachna O Braonain 27 RTE also produced the highly successful Irish Language documentary strands Leargas Scannal and CSI which were first shown on RTE One with repeats on TG4 Nuacht RTE provides a round up of the day s events at 17 40 each weekday RTE has a dedicated commissioning brief inviting proposals for new Irish language programming 28 Education Edit In the early years of Teilifis Eireann most of the educational shows were aimed at children such as Daithi Lacha In more recent years they have produced literacy programmes for adults such as Read Write Now presented by Derek Mooney 29 Regional Edit Nationwide is RTE s main regional programme in 2010 Gala began sponsoring the show The shows average audience for 2009 was 400 000 viewers 30 The show began airing in the early 1990s 31 In 1999 RTE tested opt out for Dublin Cork and Galway on UHF signals however Chorus a Dublin cable operator at the time aired the Galway edition while NTL the other Dublin cable operator aired the Dublin version 32 RTE do not provide local opt out or regional news However RTE Cork produces a number of other Irish shows Capital D was a programme for Dublin similar in style to Nationwide presented by Anne Cassin it took a look at issues in Dublin The programme did not return in 2012 Ear to the Ground is a farming magazine show Nationwide is produced by RTE Factual while Ear to the Ground is produced by Independent Films for RTE Drama and comedy Edit 1960s Edit In 1961 as Teilifis Eireann got ready to begin broadcasting it appointed Hilton Edwards as head of Drama he was heavily involved in Irish theatre at the time At this early stage they produced many international and local plays for television audiences such as Antigone The Wild Duck The Fire Raisers The Government Inspector The Physicists Martine The Well of the Saints Candida The Man of Destiny In the Shadow of the Glen Church Street The Field The Plough and the Stars The Shadow of a Gunman and The Hostage Both of Edwards successors Jim Fitzgerald and Chloe Gibson would continue with stage play adaptations but would also look for original dramas for television Hugh Leonard adapted James Joyce s Dubliners under the title Dublin and in 1966 he wrote Insurrection an 8 part real time series which depicted the events of the 1916 Easter Rising which was broadcast on Easter Week on the 50th anniversary of the rising it was RTE biggest drama production of the 1960s involving on location filming and the Army In its first ten years on the air RTE produced 103 plays of which 66 were Irish and 50 began life as stage plays Half of the drama produced came from serials such as the Dublin based urban soap Tolka Row which began broadcasting in 1964 and finished in 1968 In terms of population RTE was one of Europe s biggest producers of television drama 33 In 1965 The Riordans began broadcasting this would begin the Wesley Burrowes trilogy of Irish Agrisoaps Agricultural based dramas it was followed by Bracken in 1978 and was aired on RTE One as Gabriel Byrne s character Pat Barry moved from Kilkenny to Wicklow and in 1982 two of Bracken s main characters Dinny and Milie Byrne moved to Glenroe which ran until 2001 1970s Edit In the 1970s RTE produced several urban dramas set outside Dublin The Burke Enigma began in 1975 and was RTE s first police procedural something that they did not return to very often Partners in Practice was RTE s first medical drama and was loosely based on successful TV formats from abroad such as Emergency Ward 10 Dr Finlay s Casebook Marcus Welby M D and Dr Kildare Partners in Practice was set in the new sprawling suburban Dublin in the fictional town of Sallybawn Sallybawn was based on the new 1970s sprawling developments such as Tallaght The series was set in the fictional Sallybawn Health Centre It ran for one season in 1972 and was written by Carolyn Swift In 1978 Louis Lentin became head of RTE Drama having produced Uncle Vanya 1970 King of Friday s Men 1967 and King of the Castle 1977 34 He started Thursday Playdate these were once of plays which dramatized current events and current affairs in Ireland He would also be responsible for The Spike a controversial drama that was to run for 10 weeks only to be taken of the after the fifth episode Problems surrounded both the content A very critical look at the VEC system in Irish Education and poor scriptwriting to deal with major issues 35 1980s Edit RTE One had a major success with 1980s Strumpet City based on the novel by James Plunkett about the 1913 Dublin Lockout It was successfully sold around the world to various countries including the USSR The Year of The French was a major follow up period drama with twice the production budget as Strumpet City however it was not as successful The Year of The French was one of the many co productions that RTE produced during the 1980s it was co produced with the UK s Channel 4 and France s FR2 In 1983 RTE produced a World War II drama titled Caught in a Free State The four part series was set against the backdrop of Irish Neutrality during the Second World War It surrounded the true stories of German Spies in Ireland The series was a co production with Channel 4 Other Channel 4 RTE co productions from the 1980s include The Irish R M and Echoes In the mid 1980s RTE developed a sitcom called Leave It to Mrs O Brien which centred on the housekeeper of a Parish Priest It is often quoted as one of the comedies which shows that RTE cannot produce good comedy The series was a critical and audience failure RTE would not produce another sitcom until the mid 1990s while being criticized for not commissioning another series that featured a Parish Priest Housekeeper In 1989 RTE returned with a new drama series based in Dublin city called Fair City In 2010 the show has celebrated its 20th anniversary since it first broadcast The show continues to air four nights a week on RTE One 1990s Edit In 1993 RTE One began to broadcast TG4 s soap Ros na Run The show initially broadcast for a short season each year The show no longer airs on RTE One but instead airs each night on TG4 The show also airs on television in Scotland and America In 1994 RTE broadcast Family by Roddy Doyle a co production with the BBC In 1993 RTE produced a sitcom set in a newspaper office called Extra Extra Read All About It also known as Extra Extra It was poorly received critics stating the scripts lacked any humour and that the direction was poor Reviewing the programme for the Sunday Independent writer Colm Toibin called it probably the worst programme RTE has ever shown 36 The Irish Times Brendan Glacken was equally scathing Speaking of Extra Extra as I am afraid we still must even seasoned RTE observers seem unable to answer the question why a series so pathetically weak should have been allowed to reach the screen at all 37 The Irish Independent later listed it as one of the worst Irish TV shows ever 38 In the mid 1990s RTE return to sitcom with the development of Upwardly Mobile which ran for 3 seasons The series was a critical failure but it often land in RTE top programmes each week At the same time British station Channel 4 commissioned Father Ted which RTE is often incorrectly accused of turning down RTE would not return to sitcoms until 2001 when The Cassidys appeared on RTE Two this was also a failure however two other successive comedies appeared in the same year on RTE Two Bachelors Walk and Paths to Freedom RTE One s next comedy series would not appear until 2003 with the arrival of Killinaskully In the late 1990s RTE co produced many period dramas based on novels by significant modern day Irish novelists such as Falling for a Dancer and Amongst Women They also produced the police procedural Making the Cut and its spin off series DDU 2000s Edit As a replacement for the axed rural soap Glenroe RTE commissioned On Home Ground surrounding a rural GAA club 39 The series was not well received and was replaced in 2003 by The Clinic The Clinic was an award winning primetime television medical drama series produced by Parallel Film Productions for RTE The show ran for seven seasons between September 2003 to November 2009 The last episode aired on RTE One on Sunday 15 November 2009 The show was so successful that it also aired in Finland New Zealand Australia Iceland Scotland and Portugal Since 2000 RTE has increased its output of specialized dramas These drama s have discussed a broad range of issues such as the Irish Hepatitis C scandal in No Tears 2002 40 which featured Academy Award Winner Brenda Fricker In 2003 RTE returned to comedy with the rural based Killinaskully series The series was produced by Irish Comedian Pat Shortt The series was a critical failure but according to one critic this was due to the rural urban divide and because TV critics tend to stand very firmly on one side of that gap they have seldom attempted to understand the popularity of something so old fashioned predictable and lazy 41 The series was a huge audience success for the channel often getting over 500 000 every Sunday night with its Christmas specials becoming some of Ireland s most watched TV programmes during its run In 2004 RTE co produced with Denmark s TV2 a gritty drama series based on criminality in Dublin City Proof aired for two seasons and starred Orla Brady In 2006 RTE broadcast a fictional drama based on a nuclear fallout called Fallout Following this another drama appeared on RTE One in September 2006 the docudrama about the Stardust disaster entitled Stardust to mark the 25th anniversary of the incident In 2007 RTE began the drama series Single Handed Three episodes of the series ran over the course of three years when ITV bought the rights to the show in 2009 which led to the co production of the fourth series with Britain s ITV In 2007 RTE aired Damage a drama which focused on rape and sexual abuse In 2008 RTE produced Whistleblower this drama highlighted irregular obstetric practices within Irish hospitals Another drama in 2008 included Bitter Sweet This drama follows the difficulties encountered by three female friends who undergo difficult changes to their respective lives In 2009 RTE commissioned a second Pat Shortt comedy titled Mattie 42 Mattie initially centred on the move of a rural Garda to the big city however the series received poor reviews and audience figures were lacklustre RTE attempted to re launch the show asSTG Mattie the following year this time keeping Garda Mattie in country surrounding and adding a laughter track 43 In June 2009 RTE broadcast Father amp Son co produced with ITV 2010s Edit The 2010 Live Aid biopic When Harvey met Bobby surrounding the relationship between Bob Geldof and Harvey Goldsmith was co produced with the BBC Wild Decembers based on the novel by Edna O Brien aired at Christmas 2010 44 In 2010 their drama series Raw moved from RTE Two to RTE One RAW ran for 5 seasons with its final season airing in 2013 The series centred on a busy Dublin Restaurant The series Love Hate starring Aidan Gillen detailing the lives of the Dublin s criminal underworld began in 2010 Love Hate has since gone on to become one of Ireland most respected TV dramas before ceasing production after 5 seasons in 2015 45 In 2011 RTE co produced Brendan O Carroll s Mrs Brown s Boys with Boxpic and BBC Scotland for BBC One The series airs first on RTE One as BBC One is largely available across Ireland The BBC Two detective drama The Fall starring Gillian Anderson was produced in association with RTE and aired on RTE One RTE will also air Quirke a Dublin based detective series starring Gabriel Byrne and commissioned by the BBC and The Irish Film Board A drama surrounding the disappearance of a young girl aired in 2014 titled Amber It is directed by Thaddeus O Sullivan and stars Eva Birthistle and David Murray 46 Due to financial difficulties at RTE the series broadcast date was postponed for 2 years the four part series aired across 4 consecutive days The four part caused controversy with viewers and critics due its open ending It was reported that a fifth season of Single Handed was to be produced by RTE and ITV however the series did not get the required funding A drama surrounding the Irish banking crisis has yet to be announced 47 A series surrounding the life of former Taoiseach Charlie Haughey is expected in 2015 Aidan Gillen will play the title role in Haughey For the first time in nearly 30 years RTE returned to the Television play in 2014 Three Irish writers Fiona Looney Deirdre Purcell and Pat McCabe wrote 3 different plays for Play Next Door The writers were sent to different parts of the country and were told to set their work in a building in the locality A documentary followed each of the writers as they lived in the towns it was followed by the play 2020s Edit Entertainment Edit Chat shows Edit RTE s flagship chat show is The Late Late Show It has aired on the channel since the summer of 1962 It is the second longest running chat show and Europe s longest running chat show From 1962 until 1999 it was presented by Gay Byrne In September 1999 Pat Kenny took over the role and after hosting nine seasons as Late Late host he stepped down to host a new political programme In September 2009 Ryan Tubridy took over as host In its early years the show was known for its controversies Most Irish chat shows continue to use a similar formula to The Late Late Show most shows are live and contain a mix of serious and entertaining interviews In the late 1970s and early 1980s the biggest rival to The Late Late Show was The Live Mike hosted by Mike Murphy The show was a mix of comedy sketches and interviews Mike Murphy decided to leave the show and it was replaced by Saturday Live in the mid 1980s the series had a new host each week It in turn was replaced by Kenny Live hosted by Pat Kenny who had been a guest presenter on Saturday Live Kenny Live was more entertainment focused then The Late Late Show however towards the end of the show Pat Kenny would do a one to one interview on topical subjects e g Families of missing people Most summers RTE provide a chat show They have included Limelight hosted by Carrie Crowley Good Grief Moncreiff hosted by Sean Moncreiff BiBi hosted by Bibi Baskin Kennedy hosted by Mary Kennedy and the most recent series Saturday Night with Miriam with Miriam O Callaghan The show is well known for its wide variety of guests which often include musicians who usually perform on the show The Duckworth Lewis Method made their television debut on Saturday Night with Miriam in 2009 s season opener 48 Before hosting The Late Late Show Ryan Tubridy hosted his own Saturday night chat show between 2004 and 2009 called Tubridy Tonight After Pat Kenny left Kenny Live RTE produced a similar series to the 1980s Saturday Live this time called Saturday Night Live again with a different host each week the series last until 2002 In 2003 The Late Late Show went into competition with Dunphy Live on TV3 however it only lasted until December 2003 Though RTE had stopped producing a Saturday Night chatshow that year TV3 decided to air Dunphy Live on a Friday Night RTE produced two pilot shows for Saturday Night in 2010 The Saturday Night Show 2010 2015 and Tonight with Craig Doyle 2010 Both of these shows are aimed to replace the highly successful Tubridy Tonight which ended in 2009 Hosted by Brendan O Connor called The Saturday Night Show it was given an initial run of 8 weeks it now airs every Saturday night Craig Doyle was also given his own chat show 49 It replaced The Saturday Night Show Tonight with Craig Doyle and ran on RTE One from 18 April 2010 for 8 weeks 50 In 2011 Gay Byrne returned with For One Night Only It started with an hour long interview with boyband Westlife which included many of their hits similar episodes included Imelda May and Christy Moore In 2013 Imelda May returned for her own music show The Imelda May Show Game shows quiz shows Edit In the 1960s and 1970s RTE ran the Quicksilver quiz show presented by Bunny Carr The show would tour the country and visit different towns The contestants were picked at random to answer the questions due to this random selection process the show is fondly remembered for questions such as What the term for a male bee and the answer a wasp It also coined an Irish phrase stop the lights usually stated when something is surprising In the 1980s RTE produced game shows like Play the Game and Gerry Ryan s Secrets and quiz shows Murphy s Micro Quiz M hosted by Mike Murphy Where in the World hosted by Theresa Lowe Rapid Roulette hosted by Maxi and Know Your Sport hosted by George Hamilton Since 1989 RTE have produced a game show with the Irish National Lottery Winning Streak was the first such show originally hosted by Mike Murphy who had had previous success with his chat show The Live Mike and the Irish version of Candid Camera He had also present Mike s Micro Quiz a family quiz show that included a hi tech games machine Winning Steak started off as a half hour show on Friday nights in the late 1980s and by the mid 1990 was an hour long Saturday night game show In the mid 1990s Winning Streak was joined by other National Lottery game shows including Millionaire and Fame and Fortune hosted by Marty Whelan Telly Bingo hosted by Liz Bonnin In the 1990s RTE had international success with The Lyrics Board while it was derided by the critics the format was sold in many European countries The show was originally presented by Aonghus McAnally during its initially run and in the 2000s by Linda Martin Quiz shows included Challenging Times hosted by Kevin Myres and Dodge The Question hosted by Jonathan Philbin Bowman The 1990s saw RTE s version of Talkabout hosted by Ian Dempsey and later by Alan Hughes After Gay Byrne s decision to leave The Late Late Show he was brought back by the station to host the Irish version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire however after two seasons the show was dropped as RTE were unable to find a sponsor after Vodafone Eircell pulled its sponsorship the producers Tyrone Productions and RTE were in discussions with the National Lottery for a scratch card version of the show ironically the National Lottery had defended the use of the term Millionaire a number of years previously due to its scratch card and TV game show Millionaire hosted by Marty Whelan for RTE RTE One broadcast two editions of the Irish version of Test the Nation presented by Miriam O Callaghan in 2006 and 2007 Music Edit RTE One has shown many Irish traditional music shows including The Pure Drop and Come West Along The Road Number 1 was a pop music quiz show from the 1980s and they also aired Top of the Pops During the 1980s they had several live music shows with famous Irish stars of the time including The Sandy Kelly Show In the late 1980s and early 1990s Marty Whelan hosted a popular talent search called GFI Go For It In the mid 1990s RTE co produced a talent series with BBC Northern Ireland called Let Me Entertain You hosted by Gerry Ryan a 16 year old Samantha Mumba was one of the finalists RTE One has also several documentaries about Irish Country Music and the Showband era entitled A Little Bit Country Showband hosted and produced by Shay Healey In 2009 they broadcast All Ireland Choir Competition 2009 Reality TV Edit Since the start of the 2000s RTE have produced several Reality TV programmes for RTE One In 2001 RTE One broadcast the successful Popstars format to find Ireland s next top pop band The eventual winners were the band members of Six including on Nadine Coyle however due to her age at the time she had to be dropped from the band and went on to appear in Popstars The Rivals on ITV1 becoming a member of the girl band Girls Aloud 51 Due to the success in the Popstars format RTE set about looking for a new series for 2002 You re a Star was a similar show to American Idol and The X Factor running from 2002 to 2008 during which they select acts to go to the Eurovision Song Contest 52 In 2008 it was replaced by the All Ireland Talent Show 53 The All Ireland Talent Show has since been replaced by the international Singing format The Voice of Ireland which begins on RTE One in January 2012 In 2010 they broadcast Fame The Musical a reality TV talent search for stars of the stage version of the highly successful film and TV series Fame 54 Other reality shows include two seasons 2001 and 2002 of Treasure Island similar in format to Survivor Senator Mark Daly appeared in the second series coming third overall 55 Cabin Fever 2003 which had a group of people set sail around the Irish coast this caused controversy when the ship ran aground halfway through the series 56 RTE One has also produce celebrity versions of their reality TV shows Charity You re a Star Celebrity Farm and Failte Towers have all gained respectable audiences but critics have been less than impressed RTE s most successful celebrity reality TV is The Restaurant Factual Edit Garda Patrol ran for a number of years on RTE One It was a fifteen minute weekly show asking for help with crimes from the public In the early 1990s RTE revamped the show as a monthly hour long show called Crime Line hosted by David Harvey and Marian Finucane 57 Towards the end of the series was hosted by Anne Doyle In the mid 2000s RTE replaced CrimeLine with a similar show Crime Call Crime Call is presented by Anne Cassin and Con Murphy 58 Radharc an Irish term for view vision spectacle or sight aired from the 1960s and the 1990s They were documentaries filmed by Catholic priests The series produced 400 documentaries which focused on some regional stories but mainly international stories about Catholic Missionaries around the world and world events The series came about during the 1950s as public discussion centred on the new television services The documentaries all took a religious angle on events 59 The Irish Film Institute IFI are the custodians of the Radharc documentaries 60 To the Waters and the Wild Waterways Who Do You Think You Are Blood of the IrishHistory Edit Reeling in the Years is one of RTE most popular history strands it provides a history of Ireland from 1962 to 2009 it began as part of RTE Autumn 1999 schedule as Reeling in the Years 1980s 1990s in 2000 1970s in 2002 1960s in 2004 2000s in 2010 2010s most recently in 2021 it s possible a future series on the 2020s will be made in 2030 It was archive clips from Irish and international archives showing the big events of the world from an Irish perspective including 2 Eurovision wins 3 Irish general elections in one year the Recession Migration DeLorean Motor Company GUBU Ronald Reagan s visit to Ireland All Ireland Championship wins etc 1960 1969 1970 1979 and 1990 1999 were all broadcast events included the Dublin Monaghan bombings U2 s first TV appearance Slane Concerts the axing of The Riordans Riverdance Miley and Fidelma s hay shed love in Glenroe Twin Peaks to more serious news such as the Omagh bombings The Good Friday Agreement The resignation of the Minister for Foreign Affairs Ray Burke and the inauguration of president Mary Robinson etc True Lives Hidden HistoriesArts Edit Arts Lives is a series of arts documentaries produced by independent producers for RTE They may also be co funded by other broadcasters from around Europe Some of the documentaries include The Riordans Tea Taboos amp Tractors about the successful rural soap opera John O Conor s Beethoven Boot Camp Hugh Leonard Odd Man In Patrick Collins Through Sligo Eyes Graham Linehan Funny Business and Ronnie Drew September Song 61 The View was a weekly arts and cultural review programme broadcast each Tuesday night up until 2011 It was original broadcast on RTE Two as Later on 2 Young people s programmes Edit Main article RTE Young People s Programmes Up to 1988 the majority of RTE s children s programmes were aired on RTE One In the early years these shows included Daithi Lacha an Irish Language animated series about a duck In the 1970s they produced Wanderly Wagon which was developed for RTE by Eugene Lambert and a spin off show in the 1980s called Fortycoats amp Co however Eugene Lambert is on the record as saying that he was not involved and that RTE just rehashed old Wanderly Wagon stories The 1980s saw RTE s first Saturday morning children s strand called Anything Goes this was followed by Action Station Saturday and Pajo s Junkbox In the 1990s their Saturday mornings included Pajo s The Whole Shabang and Scratch Saturday which included The Fanta Roadshow Chart with Andy Ruane various changes took place on Saturday mornings during the 1990s with the final RTE One children s morning strand coming from RTE Cork called The Swamp In the late 1990s all children s weekend programming was fully moved to Network 2 with T X and The Disney Club Dempsey s Den aired on the channel from 1986 to 1988 Zig and Zag made their debuts on RTE One Since 1988 the majority of RTE s children programming airs on its sister channel RTE Two RTE Two provide different strands of programming tailored at different age groups these include RTEjr 1 to 6 year olds TRTE 7 to 15 year olds TwoTube 16 to 22 year olds Since 2011 RTE has a dedicated service for preschoolers called RTEjr Every Saturday night RTE One at 18 30 airs The Big Big Movie this strand features movies which a tailored towards a family audience Daytime Edit In the early 1980s RTE began testing daytime television for audiences on RTE One This was a major commitment since RTE Two was failing to gain audience that it required Their first daytime show was hosted by Thelma Mansfield one of their regular continuity announcers Good Afternoon was a mix of live interviews music children s television and soap operas 62 In 1986 RTE debuted its new afternoon show which featured a mixture of daytime chat and children s television In September the channel aired Live at 3 broadcasting from 15 00 each weekday This was followed by a new children s series Dempsey s Den 63 Live at 3 was presented by Derek Davis and Thelma Mansfield from 1986 to 1997 It included a broad range of topics healthcare cookery DIY fashion and culture It was a major departure for the daytime schedule and in an interview with TV Now Derek Davis described how many other European broadcasters were travelling over to Ireland to visit this mix genre daytime TV chat show In 1997 with the departure of Derek Davis Live at 3 was merged with another TV series called 12 to 1 12 to 1 was similar in style to Live at 3 only it concentrated on Light chat with hosts Marty Whelan and Ciana Campbell Ciana Campbell had prior to this tested out a live afternoon phone in show called Over to You similar in format to RTE Radio s successfully Liveline this eventually led to 12 to 1 64 In the late 1990s Marty Whelan Ciana Campbell and Thelma Mansfield all remained as part of the daytime TV line up and featured on PM Live In 1999 Thelma Mansfield retired from RTE to concentrate on her art career 65 This later led to the demise of PM Live which was replaced in September 1999 with Open House Open House was the first time that RTE had an independent producer produce their daytime TV service Tyrone Productions produced the show in the RTE studios and it was hosted by Mary Kennedy and Marty Whelan from 1999 to 2003 In 2004 RTE revamped their daytime schedule and axed Open House and replaced it with two new shows The Afternoon Show and The Big Bite The Big Bite was an unusual departure for RTE s daytime schedule as it had heavier content than previous shows which aired in this time slot it was hosted by economist David McWilliams The Big Bite was replaced with Seoige and O Shea which was also produced by Tyrone Productions Joe O Shea and Grainne Seoige presented the show together for 2 seasons until Joe O Shea left in 2007 he was replaced by Grainne s sister Sile Seoige and the show was rename Seoige Seoige lasted one season and was replaced by an extended version of The Afternoon Show produced by Green Inc Productions for RTE The Afternoon Show was first presented by Anna Nolan Blathnaid Ni Chofaigh and Sheana Keane Anna Nolan left the show after a year to focus on more serious TV such as RTE s Would You Believe series of documentaries Blathanid and Sheana both worked on the show together for a number of years until 2008 when it was reported they had had a falling out 66 various presenters stepping into either Blathanid s or Sheana s shoes with the final series being presented by Sheana and Maura Derrane former Ireland AM presenter In 2010 RTE One revamped its afternoon schedule which will debut in September 2010 RTE set about seeking tenders from independent producers as a consequence of this process RTE axed The Afternoon Show 67 Two new afternoon shows began in September 2010 4 Live and The Daily Show 4 Live was presented by Maura Derrane former co presenter of The Afternoon Show while The Daily Show was presented by TG4 Weather Man Daithi o Se and former TV3 News presenter Claire Byrne Both shows were broadcast from 16 00 to 17 45 GMT 68 Both new daytime shows are produced by Green Inc for RTE 69 The programmes were axed in March 2012 In October 2012 RTE moved their main afternoon programmes to Cork Today is hosted by Maura Derrane and Daithi o Se while Claire Byrne moved to Prime Time and RTE Radio 1 s Saturday with Claire Byrne On Friday s Blathnaid Ni Chofaigh and Norah Casey Dragon s Den Ireland In January 2013 RTE launched their first morning TV news service on RTE One and RTE News Now Morning Edition the programme airs from 9 am to 11 am Monday to Friday Morning Edition is presented by Keelin Shanley In 2017 Stellify Media produced Goodbye House a property show in which three siblings compete to find the perfect home for their parents Lifestyle Edit In the 1980s RTE One s lifestyle programming consisted of shows such as Check Up A weekly health show Head 2 Toe A weekly fashion series See Here A weekly consumers show Family Matters A weekly issue based show for parents hosted by Eamon Lawlor and Caroline Murphy Much of RTE s lifestyle output was produced in house until the 1990s when Independent Producers began producing shows such as About the House An Educational Lifestyle show about home renovations Ear to the Ground A weekly Agricultural magazine show Beyond The Hall Door A studio based Interior design show by the 2000s it had left the studio to do up homes Bon Voyage A travel show Darina Allen A cookery ShowMost of RTE s Lifestyle programming is air Monday to Friday between 19 00 and 21 00 and repeated on Saturday and Sunday mornings Their current set of lifestyle programmes include About the House Showhouse Heat and Rachel Allen Bakes Imported programming Edit 1961 1969 Edit RTE One has always relied on a certain amount of programming from abroad and they have also always been under pressure from UK TV channels to provide programming from other countries The 1960s on RTE is characterized by American and British imports such as Annie Oakley Everglades Have Gun Will Travel The Donna Reed Show The Adventures of Robin Hood Batman The Man from U N C L E The Andy Williams Show The Dick Van Dyke Show Robinson Crusoe Lucy Show Dr Finlay s Casebook The World Around Us The World of Wooster and Sherlock Holmes Children s programming at this time consisted of such shows as The Road Runner Show The Flintstones Skippy and Quick Draw McGraw In 1963 they also broadcast Italian lessons Parliamo Italiano 70 1970 1979 Edit RTE began expanding its schedule during the 1970s with educational and children s programming being broadcast from 11 am Children s shows imported for the channel included Tarzan Modern Madcaps The Road Runner Show Land of the Giants Apple s Way Babar Noddy Sesame Street Gemini Man Clue Club and Scooby Doo while educational programming included Education Zarabanda First Steps in First Aid and German Lesson other daytime shows included South Riding The Pallisers and Thrill Seekers Prime time imports included Lights Out The Spanish Farm The Brady Bunch Bridget Loves Bernie Fawlty Towers Little House on the Prairie The Waltons Poldark The Muppet Show Anne of the Thousand Days Midnight Is a Place Are You Being Served 71 In 1978 RTE One began broadcasting many UK TV show such as ITV s Sale of the Century and Match of the Day which was simulcast with the BBC RTE Two began broadcasting on 2 November 1978 1980 1989 Edit During the 1980s many of the language courses on during daytime hours moved to the weekend children s was presented first as Good Afternoon with many adult daytime shows mixed in until 1986 when Dempsey s Den started to broadcast imports for Children included The World of Jules Verne Ludwig Yogi s Treasure Hunt Danger Bay Arthur and the Square Knights of the Round Table Supergran European Folk Tales Kaboodle and The Real Ghostbusters Other daytime shows included Upstairs Downstairs and Emmerdale Farm Prime time imports included American shows such as The Cheryl Ladd Special Here s Lucy Ride on Stranger Falcon Crest Miami Vice Benson Dallas Magnum P I The Paul Anka Show Remington Steele Murder She Wrote Spenser for Hire The Cosby Show The Twilight Zone The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd Evening Extra Turning Point On the Town Our House The Ray Bradbury Theatre British imports included Are You Being Served Codename Icarus The Paper Lads Dempsey and Makepeace Tomorrow s World and Executive Stress 72 In 1988 RTE Two re branded as Network 2 which saw RTE move many of its children s and imported shows over to Network 2 1990 1999 Edit Children s shows remained on RTE 1 on Saturday morning for most of the 1990s imports included DuckTales Batman Family Ties The Disney Hour Katts and Dog Nellie the Elephant and The Pink Panther Show Daytime TV consisted of repeats and daytime soaps such as Little House on the Prairie The New Adventures of Black Beauty CHiPs Delia Smith s Cookery Course Emmerdale Knots Landing A Country Practice Perry Mason Carson s Law The Love Boat G P The Sullivans Santa Barbara Randall and Hopkirk Deceased Take the High Road Forever Green and Highway to Heaven American prime time show imported at the time included Star Trek The Next Generation Mancuso F B I The Cosby Show St Elsewhere MacGyver Masquerade Father Dowling Mysteries Dallas Midnight Caller Home Improvement Space Above and Beyond JAG Dr Quinn Medicine Woman RoboCop Lois amp Clark The New Adventures of Superman ER and The Practice British shows broadcast included Bergerac Agatha Christie s Poirot After Henry The Ruth Rendell Mysteries An Audience with Victoria Wood Lovejoy Hearts and Minds Ballykissangel and from 1992 to 2001 Coronation Street Educational programming at the time moved to Sunday morning including Espana Viva A Vous La France and Russian Language and People 73 28 January 1991 saw the last episode of cult favourite Twin Peaks broadcast on RTE 1 74 2000 2009 Edit Since the late 1990s RTE One s prime time schedule is made up of nearly 100 Irish programming some exceptions include EastEnders The Midweek Movie The Big Big Movie and with a few classic repeats intermittently such as Fawlty Towers and Only Fools and Horses RTE One s other daytime imports are made up of soap operas such as the Australian soaps Neighbours and Home and Away the New Zealand soap Shortland Street the British soaps Doctors and EastEnders American detective dramas including the highly repeatable Murder She Wrote and since 2001 they have broadcast American daytime chat shows including The Doctors and Doctor Phil they also broadcast Oprah but that is now shown on TV3 American dramas broadcast from 2000 to 2009 included ER The Practice Prison Break Damages Shark Angel Two and a Half Men Medium Mad Men and The West Wing British dramas Spooks and Waking the Dead have also aired on the channel 75 During the 2000s RTE broadcast the ITV soap The Bill over two half hour episodes Monday to Friday at 17 30 rather than the original hour long episodes RTE One also broadcast the revived ITV soap Crossroads 76 2010 2019 Edit RTE One launched its 2010 schedule with The Mentalist as a replacement for the long running Sunday night drama ER Other imports included Who Do You Think You Are both the British and American versions which coincided with their broadcast of the Irish version On 4 August 2010 RTE launched its schedule which included imports Mad Men and Masterchef Australia 77 RTE One also broadcast Packed to the Rafters The Bill Medium and McLeod s Daughters Daytime repeats now include Desperate Housewives The Good Wife and Brothers amp Sisters New episodes of The Good Wife move to RTE One in 2013 A amp E s Longmire began airing in 2013 Late Night TV consists largely of imported programming such as Australian drama serials Rush Blue Heelers and Tangle 2020 present Edit Mainly Covid 19 to start the new decade New look planned Autumn 2022 New indents for the 1st time since November 3rd 2006 on April 25 2023 On air identity EditIn 1966 the radio and television stations adopted the common brand Radio Telifis Eireann in line with the renamed broadcasting authority 78 and the ident used the acronym RTE with no sineadh fada diacritic over the E of Eireann The 1995 logo was the first to read RTE rather than RTE A new appearance and ident of RTE One including the ONE in a new font launched on 1 January 2014 The channel is now referred to as RTE ONE HD on Saorview 79 References Edit Who Are These People at Opening Night of Telefis Eireann 1961 RTE Archives Retrieved 18 July 2017 Opening Night of RTE 2 RTE Archives Retrieved 18 July 2017 a b 405 Lines in Ireland 1961 1983 Tech tir Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 24 April 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Your Dinner s Poured Out by Paddy Crosbie First published 1981 O Brien Press Ltd a b Changes for TV Arrival of Colour Television RTE Archives Retrieved 18 April 2017 TnaG Programming Announced RTE Archives 18 April 2006 Retrieved 18 July 2017 About TV3 The TV3 Group Retrieved 24 April 2010 RTE One HD to launch next Monday The Irish Times Archived from the original on 15 December 2013 1 dead link Free to air digital television service to be launched today Irish Examiner 26 May 2011 Retrieved 19 September 2011 Saorview 3 March 2011 Television Channels and Services SAORVIEW Saorview ie Archived from the original on 30 September 2011 Retrieved 19 September 2011 Guide to Submissions for DTT Multiplex Contracts PDF Archived from the original PDF on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 19 September 2011 RTE aims to launch new channel The Irish Post 18 May 2008 Archived from the original on 22 March 2009 PVT Consultation Document PDF Department of Communications Energy and Natural Resources Ireland pp 10 11 Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 7 December 2010 Sky and RTE announce long term partnership RTE News 4 September 2015 McSorley Anita Best Shivali 2 May 2018 Irish Sky TV customers hit with huge change all you need to know irishmirror Saorview News Brand new RTE2 1 service and extended 24 hour RTE One 1 available on Saorview www saorview ie Connected Annual Report and Group Financial Statements 2008 PDF RTE Archived from the original PDF on 8 May 2010 Retrieved 18 March 2014 today tomorrow together Annual Report amp Group Financial Statements 2012 PDF RTE Archived PDF from the original on 5 December 2013 Retrieved 18 March 2014 The new season at a glance RTE ie 13 August 2015 RTE unveils what is going to be on the telly this autumn The Irish Times a b Kairos Communications Ltd Production Kairoscomms ie Retrieved 19 September 2011 Autumn escapes 5 August 2009 RTE cuts funding for deaf services by 60pc National News Frontpage Independent ie Retrieved 19 September 2011 RTE Diversity Announces Multicultural Deadline The Irish Film amp Television Network Iftn ie 1 April 2010 Retrieved 19 September 2011 Buntus Cainte Learning the Irish Language 1967 Scoilnet Portal for Irish Education Archived from the original on 26 September 2007 Retrieved 3 August 2009 Turas Teanga RTE ie Archived from the original on 10 October 2004 Retrieved 19 September 2011 RTE RTE ie Archived from the original on 26 November 2017 Retrieved 19 September 2011 RTE Claracha Gaeilge RTE Archived from the original on 15 January 2021 Retrieved 17 August 2021 Read Write Now Welcome to Read Write Now Readwritenow ie Retrieved 19 September 2011 Gala goes Nationwide Gala Press Office Archived from the original on 17 April 2010 Retrieved 24 April 2010 Alan Farquharson Alan Farquharson Curriculum Vitae Indigo ie Retrieved 19 September 2011 RTE Local TV Iolfree ie Retrieved 19 September 2011 Sheehan Dr H 2001 Chapter 4 The 1960s The Coming of Television Retrieved 11 May 2010 Former Head of RTE Television Drama and television producer Louis Lentin has died The Irish Film amp Television Network www iftn ie Sheehan Dr H 2001 Chapter 5 The 1970s Progress Pressures and Protests DCU Archived from the original on 17 November 2011 Retrieved 11 May 2010 Toibin Colm The Very Worst Anywhere The Sunday Independent 14 November 1993 pg 17 Glacken Brendan Entering a New Reality The Irish Times 23 November 1993 pg 10 The worst Irish TV shows EVER Irish Independent 28 October 2006 Retrieved 12 February 2010 On Home Ground via www imdb com RTE Television The View RTE ie Retrieved 19 September 2011 A holiday in Killinaskully The Irish Times 2 January 2008 Archived from the original on 25 October 2010 Retrieved 26 October 2008 Mattie RTE News Archived from the original on 2 February 2016 SGT Mattie RTE News New Irish TV dramas coming to RTE RTE ie 12 July 2010 Retrieved 12 July 2010 Rumours of another Love Hate season quashed RTE Entertainment Retrieved 22 August 2020 Eva Birthistle amp David Murray Join RTE Drama Amber Thaddeus O Sullivan to direct iftn ie 24 August 2010 Retrieved 25 August 2011 Quinn Eamon 7 February 2010 New four part RTE drama to document the banking crisis The Sunday Tribune Archived from the original on 18 February 2010 Retrieved 13 June 2010 The Duckworth Lewis Method make live debut Hot Press 18 June 2009 Retrieved 18 June 2009 About RTE RTE Announces More New Programming to Brighten our way into Spring RTE ie 25 January 2010 Retrieved 19 September 2011 RTE Media Sales Television Tvsales rte ie Archived from the original on 24 October 2010 Retrieved 19 September 2011 Sweet Little Lies RTE Retrieved 17 June 2010 You re A Star RTE Retrieved 17 June 2010 RTE s All Ireland Talent Show is a ratings winner Evening Herald 6 January 2009 Retrieved 17 June 2010 Byrne 14 June 2010 Tears and a sad farewell to fame Evening Herald Retrieved 17 June 2010 Mark Daly RTE voices concerns on Cabin Fever report senatormarkdaly com Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 17 June 2010 Tom MacSweeney 24 March 2010 RTE voices concerns on Cabin Fever report RTE Retrieved 17 June 2010 Marian How I nearly walked out on RTE Irish Independent 20 June 2005 Retrieved 13 June 2010 Crime Call RTE Retrieved 13 June 2010 Our History The Radharc Trust Retrieved 29 April 2010 Irish Film Archive Collections Documentaries Irish Film Institute IFI Archived from the original on 1 May 2010 Retrieved 29 April 2010 RTE Television Arts Lives About the Show RTE ie 20 October 2010 Retrieved 19 September 2011 Archived copy Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 18 November 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link TV Listings Archived from the original on 15 July 2012 Retrieved 18 November 2009 TV Listings Archived from the original on 4 February 2013 Retrieved 18 November 2009 Archived copy Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 18 November 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Nolan Laura 27 May 2009 Tension high as Sheana and Blaithnaid meet The Evening Herald Retrieved 5 August 2010 RTE Reviews Afternoon Show Slot The Irish Film amp Television Network Iftn ie Retrieved 19 September 2011 RTE Television announces new season RTE TEN 5 August 2010 Retrieved 5 August 2010 Green Inc Going Live and Daily IFTN ie 31 August 2010 Retrieved 31 August 2010 RTE TV Listings 1960 1969 The TV Room p 10 Retrieved 24 April 2010 RTE TV Listings 1970 1978 amp RTE 1 TV Lisings 1978 1979 The TV Room p 10 Retrieved 24 April 2010 RTE 1 TV Lisings 1989 1989 The TV Room p 10 Retrieved 24 April 2010 RTE One TV Listings 1990 1999 The TV Room p 20 Retrieved 24 April 2010 RTE One TV listings for 21 01 1991 The TV Room p 1 Archived from the original on 18 July 2012 Retrieved 24 April 2010 RTE One TV Listings 2000 2009 The TV Room p 3 Retrieved 24 April 2010 RTE to screen Crossroads Planet Crossroads 14 January 2001 Acquisitions RTE Sales 5 August 2010 Archived from the original on 20 August 2010 Retrieved 6 August 2010 No 7 1966 BROADCASTING AUTHORITY AMENDMENT ACT 1966 Archived from the original on 19 November 2007 Behance www behance net Sources Edit McCaughren Samantha 9 February 2006 Irish Viewers to get a 6 Sense Soon Irish Independent Business p 10 Accessed 10 December 2009 External links EditRTE One at RTE ie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title RTE One amp oldid 1151835869, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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