This Is Nightlive

This Is Nightlive

Johnny Hansom (centre) and his team
Also known as 'Nightlive'
Genre Satire
Created by RTÉ in association with
Stillwater Communications
(Kara Hanahoe/John Ryan)
Starring John Ryan
Country of origin Ireland
Original language(s) English
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 6
Production
Producer(s) Cillian Fennell
Running time 30 minutes
Release
Original network RTÉ Two
Original release 5 January – 9 February 2009
Chronology
Followed by This is Daylive (TBC)
External links
Website www.rte.ie/tv/thisisnightlive/

This Is Nightlive (also referred to as Nightlive) was an Irish satire television series broadcast on RTÉ Two. It was created by John Ryan who also starred in the series.[1]

RTÉ had announces on A Spin Off is this is daylive from 2013

Story and Plot

The fictitious newsroom in question is said to have been operating for four years and has claimed the accolade of best-dressed current-affairs team at the 2008 VIP Style Awards. Their leader Johnny Hansom is given his own identity. It is said that he was born Declan Foley and is an "increasingly unhinged" former DJ. Úna Óg Nic Ní Súillicáint is his beautiful new co-host who possesses an extraordinary mix of occasionally contradictory Irish language names. The entertainment correspondent is Jackie Byrne-Daly, the sports reporter is Trevor Corocran and the weatherman is Mike "Cloudy" Walsh.[2]

Reception

Fears were expressed in the build-up to the launch of the show that it would be the subject of much criticism. RTÉ did not send out any advance tapes to the press

Reviews of the show were negative. John Boland of the Irish Independent, was unamused with the "lame delivery" and the lack of a good script.[3] It also failed to generate any great public interest, and was watched by an exceptionally small numbers of viewers.

A show source was reported to have expressed the discomfort felt by the actors after encountering the newscasters, weather people and presenters they are parodying in the RTÉ canteen, with one such incident occurring in the corridor outside the studio directly after the professional in question was filmed for the first episode.[4]

Complaints against the show were subsequently upheld by Ireland's Broadcasting Commission on the grounds of its poor taste in featuring terminally-ill children for comic effect.

The first programme attracted 89,000 viewers, according to RTÉ. The second programme led to a decrease in viewing figures to 76,00o, and the viewership stayed very low for the remainder of the series.

Praise

One of the few people to praise the show was the former TV3 television presenter Lorraine Keane who was apparently parodied in it. She thought her character was "hilarious".[5] The Evening Herald also noted the show's improvement towards the end of its run, believing that a few of the jokes in the final episode were "sharper than usual", and praised the "decent" idea of having Hansom copying "a Peter Finch-in-Network and getting the sack".[6] (Of course, In Network the character played by Peter Finch does not end up getting the sack - but is actually assassinated.) The newspaper stated, in double-edged praise, that the funniest element in the entire programme was the brief, ticker-tape headlines rolling across the bottom of the screen, including the self-mocking joke by Ryan "That loser who used to run a dog magazine".[6]

References

  1. "RTÉ Announces Highlights For 2009". IFTN. 2009-01-06. Retrieved 2009-01-06.
  2. "About the Show". RTÉ. Accessed 4 January 2008.
  3. "RTE comedy? You're having a laugh...". Irish Independent. 2009-01-10. Retrieved 2009-01-10.
  4. "The Diary, Ken Sweeney - Ryan expects a 'good kicking' over new spoof TV show". Sunday Tribune. 2009-01-04. Retrieved 2009-01-05.
  5. "Lorraine says her spoof send-up is hilarious". Evening Herald. 2009-02-13. Retrieved 2009-02-15.
  6. 1 2 "A hodge podge of lousy oul’ jokes". Evening Herald. 2009-02-10. Retrieved 2009-02-15.

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