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Kathryn Thomas: ‘People just assume that when you're on the TV, you're loaded. I want to be able to provide for my family the way my parents did for me'
Kathryn Thomas: ‘People just assume that when you're on the TV, you're loaded. I want to be able to provide for my family the way my parents did for me'

Irish Independent

time11-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Independent

Kathryn Thomas: ‘People just assume that when you're on the TV, you're loaded. I want to be able to provide for my family the way my parents did for me'

Kathryn Thomas: 'People just assume that when you're on the TV, you're loaded. I want to be able to provide for my family the way my parents did for me' The Q102 broadcaster on life on the airwaves, her No Frontiers days and being carried off stage at the Iftas Kathryn Thomas. Photo: Marc O'Sullivan Aoife Rooney Today at 03:30 Kathryn Thomas is a broadcaster and television presenter from Co Carlow. She previously hosted Operation Transformation and travel show No Frontiers while working at RTÉ. She now hosts a radio show on Dublin's Q102. She lives in Dublin with her husband Padraig, their daughters Ellie and Grace, and two dogs.

Kneecap controversy: what have the west Belfast rappers done now?
Kneecap controversy: what have the west Belfast rappers done now?

Irish Times

time03-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

Kneecap controversy: what have the west Belfast rappers done now?

Remind me, who are Kneecap again? They are a band – west Belfast rappers Mo Chara, DJ Próvai and Móglaí Bap – real names Liam Óg Ó Hannaigh, JJ Ó Dochartaigh and Naoise Ó Cairealláin respectively – who perform mostly in Irish. Their songs – and their stage personas – are upfront and in your face, about drug-taking and their desire for a united Ireland. This has proved hugely popular; Kneecap gigs sell out within minutes, the band has played Glastonbury, and their eponymous feature film won Iftas and a Bafta. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the band is also hugely controversial. Kneecap have been condemned for, among many other censures, wearing balaclavas on stage and a mural they commissioned of a burning RUC Land Rover, which opponents say glorifies terrorism. READ MORE For their supporters, the controversy is part of their appeal. Kneecap is part of the so-called 'ceasefire babies' generation; the band says they are satirising the old, tired tropes of the conflict era. 'Republicanism is so vast, and on a spectrum,' said Móglaí Bap in the New York Times. 'We like to toy with it. We like to take the irony on.' What happened this week? The band's most serious controversy yet. It is being investigated by counter-terrorism police in the UK over two videos; one appears to show a member of the group saying 'The only good Tory is a dead Tory. Kill your local MP', while in the other, a band member appears to shout 'Up Hamas , up Hizbullah ' – both banned organisations in Britain. The Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has called for the group to be banned and a handful of Kneecap gigs have been cancelled; there have also been calls for them to be removed from this year's Glastonbury. 'It wasn't a throwaway remark,' said Brendan Cox, the husband of murdered MP Jo Cox. 'It was part of a conversation that they were having about politics, and it was a very clear incitement to violence.' What have Kneecap said? Kneecap have apologised, saying: 'We never intended to cause you hurt' and said they 'reject any suggestion that we would seek to incite violence against any MP or individual'. They said they do not support Hamas or Hizbullah. However, the band – which has been strongly opposed to Israel 's actions in Gaza – also said the footage was being 'exploited and weaponised' and was a response to its 'calling out the US administration' over Gaza at the recent Coachella festival in the US. Artists including Fontaines DC, Pulp, Paul Weller, Blindboy Boatclub, Christy Moore, The Pogues and Primal Scream are backing Kneecap and said it was a 'clear, concerted attempt to censor and ultimately deplatform' the group for its stance on Gaza.

‘Comedy and art should push up against a line': Rich Peppiatt on class, controversy and Kneecap
‘Comedy and art should push up against a line': Rich Peppiatt on class, controversy and Kneecap

The Guardian

time13-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

‘Comedy and art should push up against a line': Rich Peppiatt on class, controversy and Kneecap

He first came to national attention blowing the whistle on his own dubious practices at the Daily Star and earning 14 mentions in Lord Leveson's 2012 report on the phone-hacking scandal. Now Rich Peppiatt is heading for the red carpet and is in with a chance for six Baftas and 17 Iftas, the Irish equivalent, for Kneecap, the scabrous, semi-autobiographical story of the Belfast Irish-language rap trio. So how did a London-born tabloid reporter go from chasing celebrities in silly outfits to making an acclaimed satirical comedy centring one of the most sensitive subjects in the country, ridiculing unionists and republicans alike, and starring Michael Fassbender? After resigning from the Daily Star in 2011 while accusing his bosses of fabricating stories (claims that the paper rejected at the time), he turned his experiences into a standup show, One Rogue Reporter, about the tabloid world, which brought him to the attention of the actors Hugh Grant and Steve Coogan, bigger stars in the Leveson inquiry. 'I did that, I toured it and then Hugh Grant and Steve Coogan said: 'Why don't you turn it into a film?' So if you are a person who doesn't really know what the hell you are doing in life and Hugh Grant and Steve Coogan come up to you and ask you to make a film, you go: 'Yeah, I'll give it a go.' It was very much a baptism of fire.' It was in that fire he 'just fell in love with film-making', realising he wanted to be a director. Work trickled in over the next few years. For Channel 4, he directed three episodes of the satirical series Supershoppers and wrote some of Tricks of the Restaurant Trade. For the Guardian, which had covered his Leveson experiences, he made a handful of videos including a mock Top Gear audition starring Polly Toynbee, among other columnists, as alternatives to Jeremy Clarkson. He had never set foot in Northern Ireland before meeting his Belfast-born wife, who hails from the republican suburb of Andersonstown and whose family bear the scars of the Troubles. Two weeks after moving to the city he saw Kneecap in a pub. 'I was just blown away by them and their stage presence,' Peppiatt recalls, admitting he didn't realise anyone spoke Irish in the UK, let along young people in Belfast. It took a while to meet them and then to persuade them to star in his movie. Once he did, Peppiatt immersed himself in their culture, including taking Irish lessons. 'I needed to understand why the Irish language was so important to them, why they would choose to live their lives through a minority language that was rejected by the country they were born into [the UK]. 'I thought that was very powerful. They were basically saying: 'You can draw a border on my land, but I will still dream in the language I want.' That to me was a very poetic act,' he says. But Kneecap is 'more than a film, more than a band', Peppiatt says. 'It's a kind of movement. It's about young people who are trying to kick at the system, saying we're not happy and through music and art we will protest. 'In fact, one thing we bonded over was that we are all from working-class backgrounds and young working-class men in the media, in TV, film are often represented as the butt of the joke, the idiots, the criminals. 'What they wanted to do was show that you could be working-class but politically engaged, able to forge their own path. But why can't you be working-class, be a person who wears a tracksuit and is involved in street culture and is erudite, can articulate political views and who has beliefs?' In 2017, their first single C.E.A.R.T.A (Irish for 'rights') was banned by Raidió na Gaeltachta, Ireland's state-owned Irish-language radio station, because of its drug references and bad language. Eight years later, the band's members, DJ Próvaí – in his tricolour balaclava – Mo Chara and Móglaí Bap, have made headlines around the world. For the band, the mischief in through their lyrics and use of language feels natural – Móglaí Bap's father Gearóid, who died just before Christmas, was a well-known Irish-language activist. Sign up to What's On Get the best TV reviews, news and features in your inbox every Monday after newsletter promotion But for blow-in Peppiatt, the provocative and unflinching script was full of challenges. Among them was a line in a sex scene between Mo Chara and a Protestant girl who declares: 'I wanna blow you like a Brighton hotel' – an unconcealed reference to the IRA's attempt to kill Margaret Thatcher in the 1984 Grand hotel bombing. 'That was the one line in the film no funder wanted. There was a three-line whip: 'Take that out',' says Peppiatt. He and the producer Trevor Birney discussed it and its importance to the dark comedic undertones of every scene. 'I said I would walk if I have to take that out. Absolutely it is a controversial line. Yes, it's not to everyone's taste, but I think that comedy and art should be pushing up against a line of acceptability,' he says. Other challenges including getting council permission for a scene that Peppiatt describes as their 'Lawrence of Arabia' shot, involving a group of Orangemen chasing one of the band through a loyalist area. That had to be done at 6am. Then there was the question of getting the German-Irish star Michael Fassbender to play an old IRA operative on the run. 'I read he learned Irish in school … We had a five-minute chat and by the end of it he said he 'loved the script, love Kneecap, let's do it'.' The new film he and Birney are developing is 'a kind of satire on 21st-century tourism in the Caribbean, zombie tourism' with a lot of 'racial politics' in the script. 'It is very very controversial, probably more controversial than Kneecap, but I'd say really fun,' he says. Why court trouble? 'I think I have worked this out for myself: unless there is some element of 'I might be absolutely cancelled', or 'it might be the last thing I ever do', then I can't really get out of bed for it.'

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