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The station, however, keeps "Radio Telefís Éireann" carved in stone at the entrance to its Donnybrook headquarters in Dublin. IRE Telefis Eireann race report and form. ITP and RTE (Radio Telefis Eireann) v Commission of the European Communities. '; Events ';

Radio Telefis Eireann Public Concert. Public concert on Radio Telefis Eireann.

***** History[edit]>>

Forbes, Moya Doherty, ServicesTelevision and Audio Broadcastingervices, Telecommunications & Web Publishers, Telecommunications Businesses, Orchestra and Dramatic Art and the like. DivisionsRTÉ Television, RTÉ Radiocommunication, RTÉ News and Current Affairs, subsidiariesRTÉ Commerical Enterprises Limited, Raidió Teilifís Éireann[2] (Irish pronunciation: Radio-Telefischool.com is a semitechnical corporation and the leading state-owned channel in Ireland.

They produce and broadcast programs on TV, airwaves and the web. Broadcasting began on 1 January 1926[3], while on 31 December 1961 it began broadcasting on TV [4], making it one of the oldest continuous broadcasting stations in the state. The RTÉ also issues a monthly life style guide, the RTÉ Guide.

The RTÉ is paid for by a TV license and by means of publicity. While some RTÉs are paid only through advertisements, other RTÉs are paid only through the royalty. The RTÉ is a legal entity managed by a committee designated by the Irish Government. The RTÉ is controlled by the Irish Broadcasting Authority.

RTÉ's forerunner, Radio Éireann, then a division of the Post and Telegraph Division, was one of 23 European Radio Union foundation organizations in 1950. In this section we look at the story of RTÉ as an organization. Concerning the pre-1960 radio programme see Minister for Post and Telegraphs and RTÉ Radio 1.

Between then and June 1960, the radio station (2RN, later Radio Éireann) was a department of the Ministry of Post and Telegraphs and the people working for the station were recruited directly by the Government of Ireland and considered officials. The RTÉ was founded on 1 June 1960 (as Radio Éireann) under the 1960 Broadcasting Authority Act, the main law under which it works.

Radio Éireann's current services were moved to the new agency, which was also in charge of the new Telefís Éireann TV channel. TV services began to be broadcast from the station's Kippure site near Dublin on 31 December 1961. Radio Éireann's first chairman was Eamonn Andrews, the first general manager was Edward Roth.

At the instigation of Áine Ní Cheanainn, the name of the agency was amended to Éireann É by the Broadcasting Authorities (Amendment) Act 1966[5], and both the broadcasting and broadcasting activities became known as RTÉ this year. Broadcasting Act 2009 (section 113) amended the name of the organization from "Radio Telefís Éireann" to "Raidió Teilifís Éireann" to reproduce the correct Irish notation.

The channel, however, keeps "Radio Telefís Éireann" chiseled in rock at the entry to its Donnybrook head office in Dublin. Pursuant to Section 31 of the Broadcasting Authority Act, 1960, the then Minister of Post and Telegraph could order RTÉ "to send no affair or any affair of a particular class".

6 ] In 1971, Gerry Collins published the first such policy, which instructs RTÉ "not to transfer any issue that could be counted as promoting, promoting, encouraging or advocating by force the attainment of a particular goal or activity of an organization". A year later, Collins fired the RTÉ authority for an intervention with Seán Mac Stíofáin, Head of Temporary IRA Forces.

Kevin O'Kelly, an RTÉ journalist who covered the Mac Stiofáin audio was briefly detained for violating the law in a lawsuit resulting from the film. RTÉ was charged in the latter 1970' s with expanding the rule of censure into a system of self-censorship. That was not allowed in RTÉ. Between 1992-93, RTÉ in O'Toole vs. RTÉ was found illegal and unconstitutional by the Supreme Courts and the Supreme Tribunal to extend the prohibition of censure to Sinn Féin members who did not speak on the party's behalf. In 1992-93, RTÉ was declared illegal and unconstitutional by the Supreme Tribunal.

RTÉ did not apply to British broadcasters in the Republic of Ireland, as at least until 1988 spectators in the Republic could still listen to the votes of Sinn Féins. RTÉ has published the following numbers in its 2012 AYR. 10 ] In 2012 RTÉ obtained a combined amount of 180,894,000 in government grants from the royalty and 127,100,000 in revenues.

In 2012, the overall expenditures for RTE amounted to ?327,023,000. Gain and loss in broadcasting, TV and on-line service. There are two major revenue streams for RTÉ: TV fees. It is necessary to make a charge of 160 per year within the State to have all the devices that can receive TV signal (not necessarily RTÉ's) in a legal way.

The absence of a current TV license may lead to a financial penalty and a penal register. At the beginning of the 90s, Minister Ray Burke set business rates to restrict the amount of revenues RTÉ could generate from advertisements, given the company's licensing revenues. Whilst such ratings were later lifted, RTÉ Radio and TV is still restricted to 6-minute commercials per hours.

Royalty does not finance RTÉ 21fm, RTÉ Aertel, RTÉ Guide or the RTÉ website. i.e.[11], but each of these trademarks is financed directly by the royalty through the use of contents financed by the royalty, such as News and Current Affairs. The RTÉ is a public limited company.

In its initial governing agreements (under the Broadcasting Authority Act 1960), its governing body was known as the RTÉ Authority. Members of the RTÉ authority have been nominated by the Cabinet on the basis of a proposal from the Minister for Communications, Marine and Natural Resources. RTÉ was both the juridical proprietor of RTÉ (under the 1960 law it was RTÉ) and its regulatory authority.

While the legal structure has been maintained, the new law no longer relates to the RTÉ Executive Committee as an "authority" and is now referred to as the Executive Committee. Out of the 12 new members to replace the RTÉ authority, the Minister will nominate six members, the Oireachtas Committee on Communications, Energy and Natural Resources will determine four nominees to be submitted to the Minister for nomination, one member will be appointed by RTÉ personnel and the Director General will be an ex officio member of the Administrative Council.

In the meantime, the present members of the RTÉ authority have been re-appointed to the new board. 16 ] The Irish Broadcasting Authority Act was enacted on 1 October 2009 (pursuant to Law No 389 of 2009 of the Broadcasting Act 2009), RTÉ is governed by the Irish Broadcasting Authority.

RTÉ is subdivided into six integral businesses (referred to as "IBDs" within RTÉ): RTÉ Television, RTÉ Radio, RTÉ News and Current Affairs, RTÉ Network, RTÉ Digital und RTÉ Orchestras Quartet & Choirs, zusammen mit Centrally Incurred Shared Services (Group Communications, Legal & Treasury, Central HR & IT Support, Group Insutance & Pension, Property and Site Facilities, RTÉ Guide Production, Publication & Advertising Sales) et einer Unternehmenszentrale.

TG4 was operating as a wholly owned company of RTÉ (Serbhisí Telefís na Gaeilge Teoranta) before its demerger from RTÉ on 1 April 2007. First transmission of the initial call sign for 4RN, which was used on FM 1, took place on 14 November 1925, when Seamus Clandillon, head of FM 1RN, said:'Seo Raidió 4RN, Baile Átha Cliath ag tástáil', iris for'This is FM 1RN, Dublin calling'.

On January 1, 1926, the periodic broadcast on Ireland's television network began. Clandillon noted in The Ireland Roundtable, a periodical devoted to services, that they did not know how to handle their music. 2RN, and Athlone became known as "Radio Athlone" (Irish: Raidió Áth Luain) and were received throughout the state.

In 1938 the name of the station became known as " Éireann Station ". From the GPO in the center of Dublin, where it had been located since 1928, the broadcasting company relocated in 1973 to a new, purpose-built broadcasting center next to the Donnybrook campus's current television center. Today, RTÉ has a national communication backbone with an increased focus on local intelligence and inputs.

Radio 1 offers extensive reporting on the latest information, the latest events, local and international events, theatre and vaudeville, farming, education, religious and sports, mainly in English, but also in Irish. The RTÉ 21fm is a favourite radio and chats programme that went on air on 31 May 1979 as RTÉ Radio 2, with Brendan Balfe being the first vocalist to be featured on the radio at noon when he presented the first host, Larry Gogan.

The RTÉ fm is designed to serve the interests of classic and artistic musicians, and replaces FM3 Classic Musica, which was broadcast for the same audiences and at the same times as RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta, an entirely lrish speaking television station, which was first broadcast on Easter Sunday, April 2, 1972.

RTÉ used to operate RTÉ Radiocork (formerly'Cork 89FM' and'RTÉ Cork Locally Radio'), a municipal broadcasting company in Cork, which was discontinued in the early 2000s. One slightly modified copy of RTÉ Europe will be aired on Eurobird as RTÉ Europe; the major distinction between this and the major FM feeder is the recording of several channels from RTÉ radio na Gaeltachta.

RTÉ's four broadcasters began testing RTÉ's programmes on the eastern coastline of Ireland on 1 January 2006, including the privately owned Today FM and World Broadcasting Network, in which RTÉ is involved. Introduced to the market at the end of 2006, it now comprises eight pure RTÉ channels - RTÉ 2DM, RTÉ Chill, RTÉ CHILL, RTÉ CHIOICE, RTÉ Digital RADIO NEWS, RTÉ Gold, RTÉ Junior, RTÉ PLUSSE and RTÉ RTL 1 EXTRA - and the four RTÉs.

RTÉ's radios will also be transmitted on Irish cabling and satellites as well as DVB-T and RTÉ Station 1 was transmitted on short wave on the DRM during certain broadcasts, which included the All Ireland final. RTÉ One and RTÉ2 are RTÉ's top of the line in the Republic of Ireland and are broadcasted together with RTÉ News Now, RTÉjr, RTÉ Aertel Digitally and RTÉ1+1 on Saorview (Ireland's electronic TV system).

In addition, RTÉ Telelevision provides two other services: This is RTÉ Life, where spectators can follow RTÉ online by using RTÉ One and RTÉ2 and RTÉ Player programmes as an on-demand videoservice. Ireland was one of the first European nations to turn its attention to broadcasting, but was a relatively laggard of TV.

Contrary to its fellow Europeans, the Irish Government did not use the media of TV until 31 December 1961. Cities such as the United Kingdom (1929), France (1935) and Italy (1954) began watching TV long before Ireland. Before the start of the Republic of Ireland's RTÉ channel, TV broadcasting from Northern Ireland was restricted via the BBC Northern Ireland (1955) and UTV (1959).

A TV committee was established in the latter part of the 1950' s with the aim of establishing an Ireland TV channel with equally little funding from the state. 22 ] It first suggested the establishment of a ITV-style network with five peaks as locations for FM broadcasting.

Since Éamon de Valera was somewhat sceptical about TV, however, nothing more was done until Seán Lemass replaced him as Taoiseach in 1959. One year later, Radio Éireann was transformed from an office of the Postal and Telegraph Department into a semi-public institution and was given full control of TV.

In 1959, a location for a new TV production centre was found and work began on its building in October 1960. Telefis Éireann began to broadcast at 19:00 on New Year's Eve 1961. TV has become an important power within Ireland's cultural scene as it has contributed to research into issues such as prostitution and birth control, which have often been seen as contentious.

At the time, Telefís Éireann began exploring children's TV and produced the groundbreaking show Wanderly Wagon, which inspire a whole generations of figures like Judge and Mr. Crow. It was in 1978 that the Government of Ireland authorised the launching of a second civil law broadcaster run by RTÉ. The RTÉ2 (later re-named Network 2 in 1988 and RTÉ Two in 2004) had a general mandate to provide Ireland speaking as well as specialised programmes, mainly from the US and the UK.

In the 90s, RTÉ, like other broadcasting organisations in Europe, began to extend its service to offer local differences. The only large recording facility RTÉ has built outside Dublin in Cork. Opened in 1995, RTÉ Cork was a great achievement. There was also a great contribution to the networking edition on Radio One and RTÉ One.

1996 an irisophone TV station TG4 (formerly Teilifís na Gaeilge) was started from Galway. RTÉ provided information and documentation for Léargas, as well as information Bulletin (Nuacht) in English. RTelevisiton began to grow is spent through the evolution of DTV. Radiocommunication TV broadcasting in Northern Ireland was via land-based flooding or via cables (coverage and integration in cabling vary).

RTÉ announces in January 2007 that it will be launching a station with the working name RTÉ International offering RTÉ One, Two and TG4-programs. RTÉ TV started the civil servant services Mux for free TV, known as Saorview and Saorsat, on 26 May 2011.

On the same date RTÉ also released RTÉ Two High Definition, RTÉjr, RTÉ One+1 and RTÉ News Now on Saorview. By 10:00 a.m. on 24 October 2012, all analog TV broadcasts in Ireland ended[26] and RTÉ's TV stations are now only available in digital form via Saorview, satellites and cables. RTÉ 1 and RTÉ 2 were also broadcasted for the first the 24th October 2012 by broadcasters in Northern Ireland on the British Freeview system.

R Teilifís Éireann's RTÉ is an important department of Raidió Teilifís Éireann, in charge of TV, Internet and Internet newscasts. This is by far the biggest and most loved message resource in Ireland - 77% of the general opinion in Ireland regard it as their primary resource for local and global newscasts.

The RTÉ Headquarters offers a wide variety of domestic and foreign information and newscasts. It is headquartered at RTÉ Telelevision Complex in Montrose, Donnybrook, Dublin, Ireland. The RTÉ Company is exposed to domestic and foreign competitors. In Ireland, the 3News and Nuacht TG4 TV and Communicorp Broadcasting and Broadcasting competitions are offered.

The BBC Newsline and UTV are offering alternate intelligence from Northern Ireland, while world intelligence stations such as Euronews, CNN International, CNBC, France 24, Bloomberg, BBC World Newsline and Sky Newscasts are widely distributed among many others. The RTÉ is a key channel for sport programmes in Ireland. Gallic soccer, hoorling, football as well as football and Rugby are broadcasted in real time on TV and TV and increasingly on-line.

Forecasts at the end of most messages. Over the last few years, RTÉ has expanded its Web Broadcast capacity. It is streaming all its radios on-line, even digitally, and there is a pure web TV station, RTÉ Now[ 38] and the possibility to see broadcasts that are protected by copyrights.

The RTÉ Orchestra's Quartets & Choirs support two full-time ensembles - the RTÉ Concert Orchestra and the RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra - as well as the RTÉ Van Brugh Quartett, the RTÉ Philharmonic Chorus and the RTÉ Cór na nÓg. RTÉ NSO and RTÉ CO employs a staff of 134 professionals. RTÉ Philharmonic choirs and RTÉ Cór na nÓg are for beginners.

Operating through a fully owned affiliate, RTÉ Network Transmission Limited, RTÉ Network operates RTÉ Network under the 2RN brand and provides broadcasting for all RTÉ' own radio and TV3 Ireland, TG4 and Today FM. Analog TV broadcasting ended on 24 October 2012 and Saorview became the main repository of Ireland's land-based TV.

It took the first time until the Irish broadcaster Raidió Teilifís Éireann was founded in 1966. Subparagraphs M, D and C were added to the RTÉ logotype after its creation as a statute organ. It remained on TV until 1986, when RTÉ determined that both stations must be clearly identifiable as RTÉ in a multi-channel world.

In 1986, the 1986 company emblem was created to coincide with the 25 years of Ireland's TV. On RTÉ One the crucifix became a number 1, while on RTÉ Two it became a number 2. Onscreen, this emblem continued until 1988, when RTÉ Two was renamed Network 2 and moved further away from its nurse station RTÉ One.

RTÉ will rename its name in 2015 following a maintenance project initiated in February 2014. 54 ][55] In 2015 RTÉ Archives brought a new company image onto the market, which included the 1969 trademark for the term "Archive". RTÉ and the Minister of Communications, Marine and Natural Resources in 2004 decided that RTÉ would work under a Charter for Public Service Broadcasting.

The Minister on 29 June 2005 nominated the members of a new RTÉ authority to replace the one nominated in June 2000. Platinum Sporting' CEO Fintan Drury, as well as Paddy Power plc, has been named RTÉ's Chair. Other members of the Authority are Maria Killian, Patricia King, Ian Malcolm, Patrick Marron, Una Ní Chonaire, Emer Finnan, Stephen O'Byrnes and Joe O'Brien.

This new authority will not serve for more than three years. Fintan Drury stepped down as chair of RTÉ on January 11, 2006, quoting a possible conflicting interest in his roles as adviser to the organizers of the Ryder Cup Golftournament and as chair of a radio station that had been implicated in a number of broadcastings.

That was after the government of Ireland proposed including the event in the schedule of sporting activities to be shown on free terrestrial TV and British Sky Broadcasting, the copyright owners, objected. Mary Finan was named Chairman[56] of the RTÉ Authority on 22 February 2006. The proposal is that RTÉ and TG4 become distinct private liability entities, with the Minister being the exclusive member of both entities (CLGs have no shareholders).

The RTÉ is now required by law to adopt a five-yearly chart and issue a commitment every year and falls within the competence of the proposal of the Irish Broadcasting Authority. Broadcasting Act 2009[57] maintains RTÉ as a legal entity, but renames the RTÉ authority to RTÉ Board and changes the way in which it is designated.

TG4 became an autonomous joint-stock company in April 2007 and has been a 100% RTÉ affiliate since its creation. The RTÉ will continue to provide programming to the station, which includes Nuacht TG4. The Minister of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources on 24 February 2009 nominated the members of a new RTÉ authority to replace the one nominated in June 2006.

Current Communications Clinic Chair Tom Savage has been named RTÉ Chair. Other members of the Board were Patricia Quinn, Karlin Lillington, Fergus Armstrong, Alan Gilsenan, Seán O'Sullivan, Emer Finnan. He was Cathal Goan, then Director General, RTÉ as an ex-office member of the agency. This new agency was in place for no longer than six month, as the Broadcasting Act 2009, which came into force on 12 July 2009, dissolved the agency and replaced it with an RTÉ board.

Pursuant to Section 179 para. 3 of the Act, any member of the Executive Board who was a member of the authority at the time the Act was ratified will remain a member until the end of his or her period of tenure on 24 August 2009. This is Jack Dowling, Leila Doolin, Bob Quinn, Sitting Down and be Counted: the culture development of a TV channel, Wellington Publishers Ltd.

RTÉ Annual Report, 2013" (PDF). Archive (PDF) from the July 7, 2015 org. RTÉ Annual Report 2000 pp3" (PDF). X-RTÉ News. Archive (PDF) of the orginal on March 1, 2011. Accessed January 13, 2011. RTÉ Annual Report 2002 p. 10" (PDF). X-RTÉ News. Archive (PDF) of the orginal on March 1, 2011.

Accessed January 13, 2011. Law on the Broadcasting Authority (Amendment), 1966 (Section 3). Archiveed from the orginal on June 5, 2011. Accessed January 13, 2011. S. I. No. 7/1977 - Broadcasting Supervision Act, 1960 (§ 31) Ordinance, 1977". Archiveed from the orginal on January 19, 2012. Accessed October 30, 2011.

S. I. No. 1/1993 - Broadcasting Supervision Act, 1960 (§ 31) Ordinance, 1993". Archives from the orginal on February 22, 2014. Released September 17, 2014. Annual Report & Consolidated Financial Statement 2012" filed on December 5, 2013 at Wayback Machine..... RTÉ Annual Report 2009" (PDF).

The RTÉ Press Office. Archives (PDF) from the 22 February 2011 org. Accessed August 18, 2010. RTÉ Annual Report 2010" (PDF). RTÉ. P. 44. Archives (PDF) from the October 17, 2011 org. Accessed July 14, 2011. Sat, 10 October 2009 - RTÉ pays'excessively' by today's yardsticks.

Accessed January 13, 2011. "Kenny-- Kenny leads the RTÉ list." "National News, Frontpage". Accessed January 13, 2011. About RTÉ. RTÉ. Archiveed from the orginal on September 17, 2009. Members of the RTÉ Board. The RTÉ Press Centre. Archiveed from the orginal on November 1, 2010.

Accessed February 13, 2011. UTV News - The demand for the second Icelandic voice channel is growing. Archives from the orginal on March 3, 2008. Accessed January 13, 2011. "Rette has no prayers to attract young audiences." Archives from the orginal on November 25, 2017. Released November 18, 2017. Television Commission (May 1959).

Archives (PDF) from the 8 August 2017 issue. Burns, John (January 14, 2007). "The RTÉ launches export service." Accessed May 22, 2010. Bowman, John (2011). Windows and mirrors RTÉ Television: 1961-2011. John Bowman's story of the RTÉ textbook published. X-RTÉ News. November 24, 2011. Archiveed from the orginal on November 28, 2011.

Accessed November 24, 2011. RTÉ An analog shutoff 24/10/2012 (Hill gauge)". Archives from the orginal on July 16, 2014. Accessed December 30, 2013. RTÉ achieves a premiere in HD advertising distribution. Archiveed from the orginal on February 9, 2015. RTÉ News and Events" (PDF). RTÉ. Archives (PDF) from the 19 August 2008 org.

January 20, 2009. Archiveed from the orginal on August 25, 2010. Myers, Kevin (March 27, 2009). "The RTÉ cafeteria is the most important place to set the sweeping agenda." "But RTÉ must inform both sides about the payment of the civil service - Eoghan Harris, columnist". Accessed January 13, 2011. RTÉ Annual Review (2007) p. 27" (PDF).

Archives (PDF) from the 27 March 2009 org. RTE starts its" viewing-on-demand services - News - News - News | siliconrepublic.com - Ireland's technology news service". siliconrepublic.com. Archiveed from the orginal on September 29, 2011. Accessed January 13, 2011. New RTÉ catch-up TV services. ie - RTÉ Ten" started.

Archiveed from the orginal on April 8, 2010. Accessed January 13, 2011. Netflix on RTÉ content". Netflix is adding RTÉ shows. Archiveed from the orginal on September 14, 2012. Accessed September 14, 2012. McCaughren, Samantha (January 24, 2010). Archiveed from the orginal on December 10, 2010.

Accessed January 13, 2011. X-RTÉ News. Archiveed from the orginal on July 31, 2010. Accessed July 21, 2010. DTT starts on 31 October - RTÉ News". Archiveed from the orginal on February 22, 2011. Accessed January 13, 2011. BAI - Broadcasting Authority of Ireland - Nachrichten".

Archiveed from the orginal on July 21, 2011. Accessed January 13, 2011. "Getting started with free TV satellites and free RTÉ TV roll-out." Archiveed from the orginal on January 18, 2012. Accessed January 13, 2011. RTÉ. ie Media Player: RTÉ. ie Extra Video July 14, 2010". Archiveed from the orginal on February 22, 2011.

Accessed January 13, 2011. "and RTÉ is using satellites for digitally rolling out to far-flung areas." Accessed July 21, 2010. RTÉ Graphic Design (RTEGraphics) - Twitter". Archives from the orginal on January 19, 2014. Released September 17, 2014. Archiveed from the orginal on July 17, 2012. Accessed January 19, 2012. Murphy, Aurthur (March 19, 1987).

RTÉ. Archiveed from the orginal on August 20, 2011. Accessed January 19, 2012. Archiveed from the orginal on May 10, 2015. RTÉ Re-branding Invitation to bid - boards.ie". Archives from the orginal on March 2, 2014. Released September 17, 2014. Mary Finan new chair of RTÉ Authority. Archiveed from the orginal on March 11, 2011.

Accessed April 7, 2011. Archives (PDF) from the 4 January 2011 org. Accessed January 13, 2011. RTÉ name modification corrects typos that took 40 years". Archiveed from the orginal on February 24, 2011. Archives from the orginal on 21 March 2008. Accessed April 7, 2008. "With a ?350 million refurbishment - Media, Business, RTÉ is getting equipped for the next era".

Accessed January 13, 2011. RTÉ - RTÉ News has been approved for this. Archiveed from the orginal on February 22, 2011. Accessed January 13, 2011. RTÉ names Dee Forbes as new Director General. Archives from the orginal on August 28, 2016. Accessed August 23, 2016. Archiveed from the orginal on June 5, 2009.

Accessed June 2, 2009. <font color="#ffff00">-=http://www.independent.ie/business/media/cashstrapped-rte-will-break-even-vows-chief-1770984.=- proudly presents Archiveed from the orginal on October 25, 2011. Accessed September 8, 2010. X-RTÉ News. Archive (PDF) from the 29 December 2010 org. Accessed January 13, 2011. "RTÉ is now obliged to advertise on Christmas Day." Archiveed from the orginal on February 17, 2013.

Accessed December 23, 2012. Accessed November 16, 2008. "The RTÉ crowd is stirring hell over the late show of Satanic." Accessed November 25, 2008. March 27, 2009. Archiveed from the orginal on March 2, 2015. Accessed March 27, 2009. X-RTÉ News. March 25, 2009. Archiveed from the orginal on 28. March 2009. Accessed March 27, 2009.

X-RTÉ News. March 26, 2009. Archiveed from the orginal on March 2, 2015. Accessed March 28, 2009. Probably trigger' in RTÉ celebrity Gerry Ryan's deaths. The BBC News. Archiveed from the orginal on December 13, 2010. Accessed December 10, 2010. Archiveed from the orginal on October 22, 2012. Accessed December 10, 2010.

Archiveed from the orginal on March 2, 2015. Accessed December 21, 2010. He said RTÉ and the general press were "very biased" about the Katy French coke dying in December 2007 and had now "come home to sleep in their own case". "After a''drunken'' television broadcast, Prime Minster Brian Cowen of Ireland under pressure".

Archiveed from the orginal on September 23, 2010. Accessed September 20, 2010. RTÉ to stop the''Share Deal' advertising'. October 12, 2011. Archiveed from the orginal on January 21, 2012. Released September 17, 2014. Slander charges against RTÉ begin next months. October 12, 2011. Archiveed from the orginal on January 18, 2012.

Released September 17, 2014. Archives from the 23 June 2015 org. Released September 17, 2014. October 6, 2011. Archiveed from the orginal on December 13, 2012. Released September 17, 2014. RTÉ apologizes to Father Kevin Reynolds Archives on October 7, 2011 at the Wayback machine..... October 7, 2011. Archives from the 23 June 2015 org.

Released September 17, 2014. Archiveed from the orginal on May 5, 2012. Released September 17, 2014. <font color="#ffff00">Seanad discussing RTÉ apologies to Father Reynolds". October 11, 2011. Archiveed from the orginal on January 18, 2012. Released September 17, 2014. Cullen, Paul; McGreevy, Ronan (November 23, 2011). "and admits'serious mistakes'."

Archiveed from the orginal on November 23, 2011. Accessed November 23, 2011.

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