
Lyra: 'Keyboard warrior insults still make me feel like I am not good enough'
Pop singer Lyra admits she still gets 'upset' when she is trolled by malicious 'keyboard warriors' on social media.
The 'Bandon Beyoncé' features in the first episode of RTÉ's Uncharted with Ray Goggins this week, paired with none other than former Taoiseach Leo Varadkar.
The unlikely duo travel to the untamed mountains of Drakensberg, South Africa, with the adventurer and former special forces soldier Goggins putting Leo and Lyra through their paces in the wilderness. Ryan Goggins, Lyra and Leo Varadkar in South Africa on Uncharted with Ray Goggins. Pic: RTÉ
The Falling singer tells the programme she is 'really enjoying just being Lyra in the wild', elaborating that it is 'hard on social media' as an entertainer.
'They love to take you down a peg or two,' she says of her unnamed tormentors. 'They love to be keyboard warriors.
'I am a people pleaser… and I like making people happy, and then when people message me, taking me down, I feel like I've not reached the bar I should have reached, and I'm not good enough, and it gets me in the heart.
'I always get upset when I talk about it.'
As part of their gruelling challenge, the trio sleep in caves, scale mountains and climb sheer rock faces on their way to the summit of Tugela Falls, one of the tallest waterfalls in the world.
Lyra, whose debut album went to number one last year, says the politician was 'massively out of his comfort zone', giving the two something in common. Lyra and Leo Varadkar on Uncharted with Ray Goggins. Pic: RTÉ
'It made it easier to relate to each other and almost be on the same wavelength for the start of it,' Lyra says.
Varadkar treats the adventure as part of his 'gap year' after stepping away from politics at the end of the last government term.
The former Fine Gael leader tells the programme he is 'a little bit apprehensive' ahead of the escapade, saying he hasn't 'done something like this before'.
'I'm used to being briefed about what's ahead, so I'm not used to this at all.
'People get to know you as a politician, they get to know you in a very particular way, being serious all the time, not showing vulnerabilities… It's going to be very different – I can just be myself. Leo Varadkar. Pic: Leah Farrell/RollingNews.ie
'I really only finished up with politics with the election there at the end of November. I'm kind of calling it a gap year, where I have a chance to try lots of different things, and this is one of them.'
The ex-politician even learns a lesson from the stern Goggins – albeit too late – on the value of geeing up his charges.
Speaking of 'one regret' he has, he tells his guide: 'I managed really big teams – teams of ministers, TDs… I'm kind of sorry I didn't spend maybe an extra 10, 15 minutes a day just doing the words of encouragement, like you have done for us.
'It really makes a big difference. There was never enough time in the day to do everything I wanted to do, but even just a few text messages, a quick voice message once a day to one person… that's a big regret and I can't fix that one.'
Lyra, meanwhile, says she regrets 'not standing up and saying, 'This is me – accept it or not', when told by the industry that she needed to be slimmer in the early days of her career, triggering a battle with bulimia.
'I wish I had done it sooner, because I would have gotten a lot more of my life back and enjoyed my first experiences in the music industry a lot better.'
Uncharted with Ray Goggins begins on Wednesday, May 14, on RTÉ One and RTÉ Player at 9.35 pm

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Independent
5 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Eamonn Sweeney: It's lonely in RTÉ's ivory tower, they should stop lecturing people forced to live in the real world
We need to talk about RTÉ. It teamed up with the GAA to set up an unpopular pay-per-view platform, helping them to ultimately reduce the number of free-to-air big matches, while turning its own Gaelic games punditry into a pale shadow of its former self.


RTÉ News
11 hours ago
- RTÉ News
How Joe Duffy changed Irish radio forever
Back in 2007, I interviewed Joe Duffy in the seafront house in Clontarf, where he still lives with his wife, June, and where they raised their triplets, Ellen, Sean, and Ronan. The broadcaster, who will step down as host of Liveline next Friday after 27 years, was then 51 years of age, and he was his usual very good company. He yarned and cracked jokes ("Isn't it funny how Gay Byrne only became a household name when he retired?") but he was also very passionate about his radio show, a mix of the deadly serious, the light-hearted and the plain odd that embraced all human life. However, as soon as I clicked my tape recorder off, Joe put on a show of mock indignation and said: "I'm annoyed that you didn't come to look at my fire engines..." And there they were, ranging from the vintage to the modern, and taking up two shelves in his living room - Joe Duffy's collection of model fire brigades. "This one cost a ton," he said, lapsing into Dublinese and picking up a cute little red number that might have caught his attention when he was a child growing up in Ballyfermot. Fire engines, eh? The metaphor was almost too clunky to mention, but impossible to ignore as Joe Duffy has been putting out fires and starting a few of his own as host of Liveline over the past 27 years. And now it's all coming to an end next Friday when Duffy (who is now 69) will hang up the phone, but maybe not the mic for the last time. Politicians, publicans, bankers, TV producers (take that, Normal People!) and just about anyone who has provoked the ire of the great Irish public is not safe or sacred on a show that truly cuts to the heart of public access radio and public service broadcasting. In its soon-to-depart host's own words, Liveline was "a brilliant weathervane for subterranean Ireland". It is a phone-in show that is never phoney, and with Joe at the helm, it really became the sound of a nation talking to itself. Duffy was the everyman at the end of the phone who could cut to the heart of a story with journalistic rigour and an avuncular approachability. His empathetic sigh punctuated many an afternoon, and his slowly, slowly, catchy monkey approach to teasing out the heart of a story and giving all sides their say made him a brilliant listener, but with antennae tuned to the right questions to ask. He uncovered harrowing stories of institutional abuse, medical scandals, and helped right wrongs for consumers left out of pocket. Scammers were scorned, and politicians were all but banned from Liveline under Joe's watch. As he often said, "I am disliked equally by the banks, the powerbrokers, the newspapers and RTÉ itself." If people couldn't get a reply from a company, a TD, or a minister, they would call Joe. Liveline also became the place to tell the stories Ireland wasn't always ready to hear. From survivors of abuse, institutional neglect and discrimination, Joe gave them a place to talk openly and without fear of judgement in a country that is often too quick to judge. Just last Tuesday, Liveline lit up with discussions about the Israel-Iran war, organ donations, and, well, a pregnant Irish woman's craving for Erin's mushroom soup in Zimbabwe in 1988. Liveline was a lifeline for the dispossessed and the plain pissed-off, and it made Joe Duffy a household name. This was a show that could go anywhere and often did. Sob stories, incredibly sad stories, mad stories and bad stories – all guided by Duffy's journalistic rigour and keen ear for a human interest story. Anyone who worked on the show over the years will tell you that they wouldn't have a clue what was going to happen seconds before they went on air. That or they didn't have anything to talk about. But this is Ireland, so that never lasted very long. As he said on The Late Late Show in May, "I go into the studio with an idea of how it might start, but no idea how it will end. It could end in laughter; it could end in tears." How did he do it all these long years? You'd need the patience of a saint, not to mention an industrial bulls*** detector. "I come out of the show every day kicking myself," he said during that 2007 interview. "I miss myself when I do try to kick myself. I come out every day thinking, 'why didn't I say this, why didn't I move to that quicker?'" But he was always on the side of the caller and not some remote figure up in Montrose, despite being the highest-paid person in RTÉ over the past few years. The former student activist and prison social worker was the perfect host for Liveline. Then again, he had an accent you didn't hear very often on the radio, least of all from the host of the second most listened-to programme in the country. Neither was Joe given to slick patter or the kind of aimless musings that fill up too much airtime. Joe, who always wore his intelligence and love of culture lightly, was never the story. Liveline is about giving ordinary people the power to break stories, vent frustrations and speak their truth in real time. He let the nation do the talking - the now semi-mythologised "woman from Clontarf" has long since become the Irish equivalent of the man on the Clapham omnibus. Now the "most curious boy in the class", as one of his school teachers used to call him, is bowing out. It's no exaggeration to say that he changed Irish radio and helped change the actual country forever and for the better. The show celebrates 40 years on air this year, and Joe can depart the hot seat in the knowledge that it is still the second most listened-to radio programme in Ireland. Speaking live on air the day he announced his retirement last May, he said, "People felt they could pick up the phone, ring Liveline, and share their lives, problems, stories - sad, bad, sometimes mad and funny, their struggles, and their victories. I never took that for granted, not for a single minute." The triplets are now 30 and making their own way in the world, and Joe is 69. It's time for a change of gear for Duffy, but there is a quip from his late mother Mabel that he always circles back to and one that never gets old. "My mother always had a great line," Duffy said. "She was down at the shops in Ballyer years ago and someone who had just returned to the area after a few years said to her, 'Mabel, I hear your Joseph is working in RTÉ - what's he doing?' And she said, 'He answers the phones.'"


The Irish Sun
2 days ago
- The Irish Sun
ITV drama set to come to an end after three series with filming for the final episode already underway
A POPULAR ITV drama looks set to end after three series as it's confirmed its upcoming run will be its final one. Advertisement 3 ITV drama The Dry is to end after three series Credit: copyrightpeterrowen2020 3 The Irish drama is currently filming its third and final series Credit: RTÉ However, for its second series, it was quickly moved to ITV amid its popularity. But now, the comedy-drama set in Dublin will come to a close with its impending third series. Production on its final episodes is currently underway in Dublin with the show likely to hit screens next year. The programme's writer, Nancy Harris, confirmed that there would be no more editions in a statement in which she reflected on the show. Advertisement Read More on ITV She said: 'It has been a true joy to see audiences embrace the Sheridan family in all their dysfunctional glory and I am so grateful to have gotten to tell this story over three seasons. "The third and final season aims to go deeper than ever before, really getting under the skin of Shiv and the family in a way that we hope is both surprising, funny and (painfully) honest.' Whilst Nana Hughes, the Head of Scripted Comedy at ITV went on to add: "ITV are absolutely thrilled to be part of the team alongside RTÉ and Element Pictures for the third and final series of The Dry. "Nancy Harris' scripts will make you laugh and may well make you cry....I did both just reading the scripts. Advertisement Most read in Drama "Nancy's award winning writing delivers more of the chaotic mess that is the Sheridan family. "I can't wait to see what Paddy and the cast will bring to the finale of this wonderful show.' Endeavour star returns in major new ITV drama in first TV role since that show was axed The programme follows Shiv Sheridan, played by actress Roisin Gallagher, a woman recovering from alcoholism who makes her way back home to Dublin. At 35 years old, she is fresh off ten years in London trying to be successful as an artist but to no avail. Advertisement Her family in Dublin are not very supportive of her sobriety as they are all big drinkers and some even drug-users. The Dry follows Shiv as she navigates this and how she finds her feet back amongst her family in Dublin. Crime dramas on ITVX Crime drama buffs have a wide selection of choices on ITVX - here is a selection of some of the programmes available to binge. Professor T: Based on a Belgian TV series of the same name, former Death in Paradise lead Ben Miller plays the title character. Professor Jasper Tempest is a criminologist with OCD who helps the police solve crimes. The cast also includes Emma Naomi, Barney White and Andy Gathergood. This series follows a mother's grief for her son, who was killed in an accident. Nicholas Blake's novel of the same name has been adapted for the programme. Stars include Cush Jumbo, Jared Harris, Billy Howle and Geraldine James. Red Eye: Starring Richard Armitage, Jing Lusi and Lesley Sharp star in this six-part thriller, which mostly takes place during an all-night flight between London and Beijing. With dead bodies piling up and a mystery to unravel, the heroes must work fast to get to the truth. This Australian drama originally aired as a miniseries in 2022, with the episodes dropping in the UK in February 2023. Four months later, the show was renewed for a second season. Jurassic Park star Sam Neill stars in the leading role of barrister Brett Colby. Martin Clunes stars in this drama based on true murder investigations. Series one focused on the death of Amélie Delagrange, which took place in 2004, while the second depicted the search for serial rapist Delroy Grant. 3 The story follows a recovering alcoholic woman in Dublin after 10 years living in London Credit: ITV