Podcast ad sales in the Irish market from Acast, the world’s leading independent podcast company, have delivered podcast creators returns of €7 million globally since launching locally in Ireland at the end of 2019. Home to some of the biggest podcasts in Ireland, including The Blindboy Podcast, The David McWilliams Podcast, The Tommy, Hector and Laurita Podcast, Catch Up with Louise McSharry, The Witness, I’m Grand Mam and The Stand with Eamon Dunphy, Acast now boasts more than four million monthly listens in the region.
Acast is committed to empowering all podcasters in Ireland to discover their audience and make money from their craft on their own terms, irrespective of their size or location. Last year, it launched its hugely successful Acast Amplifier programme in Ireland to champion brand new creators as well as launching innovative and world-class products, tools and services to allow any podcaster to grow and monetise...
Acast is committed to empowering all podcasters in Ireland to discover their audience and make money from their craft on their own terms, irrespective of their size or location. Last year, it launched its hugely successful Acast Amplifier programme in Ireland to champion brand new creators as well as launching innovative and world-class products, tools and services to allow any podcaster to grow and monetise...
- 1/25/2024
- Podnews.net
Eamon Dunphy has apologised after swearing twice on air during Irish broadcaster Rte's discussion about Brazil's World Cup performance.
The football pundit was in a studio discussion with host Bill O'Herlihy when Dunphy was asked about the high expectations for Brazil's players.
After muttering that the pitch was a "f**king bog", Dunphy added: "When Neymar was shaping up to take that penalty, I thought he was f**king dreading it."
O'Herlihy gasped, before informing Dunphy that they were live on air. He added: "I apologise for that. Obviously, that was an inexactitude."
After an ad break, O'Herlihy addressed viewers, telling them that they may have heard an "unfortunate word" before handing them over to Dunphy.
"I'd just like to apologise to anybody," Dunphy said. "I thought we were on an ad break, and I used a four-letter word.
"I'm very, very sorry for the offence I'm sure I caused some people.
The football pundit was in a studio discussion with host Bill O'Herlihy when Dunphy was asked about the high expectations for Brazil's players.
After muttering that the pitch was a "f**king bog", Dunphy added: "When Neymar was shaping up to take that penalty, I thought he was f**king dreading it."
O'Herlihy gasped, before informing Dunphy that they were live on air. He added: "I apologise for that. Obviously, that was an inexactitude."
After an ad break, O'Herlihy addressed viewers, telling them that they may have heard an "unfortunate word" before handing them over to Dunphy.
"I'd just like to apologise to anybody," Dunphy said. "I thought we were on an ad break, and I used a four-letter word.
"I'm very, very sorry for the offence I'm sure I caused some people.
- 6/18/2014
- Digital Spy
London – An soccer pundit has apologized for swearing on the air Tuesday night during Irish national public service broadcaster Rte's coverage of Brazil's second World Cup match. Eamon Dunphy, a former soccer pro who also played in the Irish national team, in a studio discussion with host Bill O’Herlihy just before the start of the game against Mexico was asked about the high level of expectations for Brazilian star players, such as Neymar. Photos World Cup: The 32 Biggest Stars He referenced Neymar’s penalty goal during Brazil's World Cup opening match against Croatia. "When Neymar was shaping up
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- 6/18/2014
- by Georg Szalai
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
From Gordon Hill to the doyen of cricket umpiring, via one official sending off another and even a spot of Naked Gun
1) Gordon Hill
It's a touch hard to believe amid the bland pale-faced middle-management orthodoxy of today's referees, Gordon Hill did what no football official has done before or since – he made being the man with the whistle look cool.
Between 1966 and 1975 he was certainly the anti-establishment face of the establishment. He looked like a lost fifth Beatle (free-kicks were awarded from underneath a mop of hair and from behind a thick moustache), undid more buttons on his referee's shirt than was publicly decent and gave as good as he got with the players.
On one occasion Millwall's Eamon Dunphy complained at a robust tackle going unpenalised. "You would have avoided it last year," Hill told him. "You're fucking going, you are. Getting past it." His comfort with expletives...
1) Gordon Hill
It's a touch hard to believe amid the bland pale-faced middle-management orthodoxy of today's referees, Gordon Hill did what no football official has done before or since – he made being the man with the whistle look cool.
Between 1966 and 1975 he was certainly the anti-establishment face of the establishment. He looked like a lost fifth Beatle (free-kicks were awarded from underneath a mop of hair and from behind a thick moustache), undid more buttons on his referee's shirt than was publicly decent and gave as good as he got with the players.
On one occasion Millwall's Eamon Dunphy complained at a robust tackle going unpenalised. "You would have avoided it last year," Hill told him. "You're fucking going, you are. Getting past it." His comfort with expletives...
- 10/11/2013
- by John Ashdown
- The Guardian - Film News
Former former Scotland, Manchester United and Leeds United midfielder and Celtic manager Gordon Strachan has joined RTÉ Television's lineup of soccer panellists this season. One of football's more colourful characters, Gordon will sit alongside RTÉ Television's existing panel of pundits which includes John Giles, Eamon Dunphy, Graeme Souness, Ray Houghton, Kenny Cunningham, Ronnie Whelan and Trevor Steven as well as anchors Bill O'Herlihy, Darragh Maloney, Peter Collins and Con Murphy.
- 10/23/2009
- IFTN
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