The row over

Satire, incloosion, hilarity, music, jokes, exclusion – everything.

It is considered one of the funniest episodes of a beloved sitcom, but the Father Ted storyline about Eurovision has been dragged into the row over Israel’s participation in this week’s song contest.

Ireland’s national broadcaster, RTÉ, which is boycotting the competition in protest against Israel’s inclusion, will instead broadcast the 1996 episode A Song for Europe, in which the characters Father Ted and Father Dougal perform their song My Lovely Horse and earn nul points.

The decision prompted condemnation on Tuesday from Graham Linehan, one of the show’s creators, who accused RTÉ of using the show as “a tool of antisemitic harassment” and said it was an “act of pointed, gleeful counter-programming”. He demanded the resignation of the broadcaster’s director-general, Kevin Bakhurst.

The fact that RTÉ is boycotting the competition because Israel is in it is rather startling. The pope versus the Jews all over again is it?

Comments

2 responses to “The row over”

  1. Papito Avatar

    Ireland is boycotting Eurovision because Irish people don’t hate Israel as much as Irish politicians and activists do. Irish televoters voted overwhelmingly for Israel’s entry in 2025, and they might do so again in 2026, and that’s very embarrassing for the people in charge.

  2. Your Name's not Bruce? Avatar
    Your Name’s not Bruce?

    How long before someone in the Rainbow-Glitter Alphabet Soup “community” screams about RTÉ broadcasting something created by Notorious Unperson-to-be-shunned Graham Linehan? Did someone there not get the memo/wanted poster?

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