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- When "The Man" tries to derail a black candidate's presidential campaign, Undercover Brother and his fellow secret agents come to the rescue.
- Irish language "soap" set in an imaginary Connemara village.
- A chief pathologist in the Dublin city morgue investigates sudden death victims in the 1950s.
- Two tramps wait for a man named Godot, but instead meet a pompous man and his stooped-over slave.
- Riverdance is rooted in a three-part suite of baroque-influenced traditional music called Timedance composed, recorded and performed for the 1981 Eurovision Song Contest, which was hosted by Ireland.
- The Story of the Irish Famine of the 1840s.
- With warmth, wit and honesty, Derry Girls' star Jamie-Lee O'Donnell reflects on her childhood experiences and discovers what life's like for young people growing up in Derry today.
- Documentary series telling the epic and often challenging story of the origins, conflict and legacy of the civil war that took place in Ireland in 1922 and 1923, based on the mammoth text 'Atlas of the Irish Revolution'.
- The story of the Irish war of independence 1919 to 1922
- Watch this extraordinary early Riverdance performance, captured live at Radio City Music Hall in the heart of New York City.
- A powerful and stirring reinvention of the show, celebrated the world over for its Grammy Award-winning music and the thrilling energy and passion of its Irish and international dance.
- Hamm is blind and unable to stand; Clov, his servant, is unable to sit; Nagg and Nell are his father and mother, who are legless and live in dustbins. Together they live in a room with two windows, but there may be nothing at all outside.
- The land is filled with people in urns chattering at top speed, but only to themselves, not to one another. The focus goes to three people: a man, his mistress and his wife.
- A middle-aged woman, half-buried in the earth, chatters away to a taciturn man, who lives in a hole behind her. Later, she is buried up to her neck, and the man does not seem to be about.
- This wonderfully entertaining dance documentary tells the extraordinary story of how Irish dance developed over centuries from a traditional peasant dance to a form that has taken the world by storm and is enjoyed by tens of millions. The film shows how Irish dance has both been influenced by and influenced the dance of many cultures and how it developed as an expression of resistance.
- Documentary series providing an insight into the lives of children across the UK.
- A stage director and his female assistant find the blackest protagonist possible, then make him up as white as possible, to create the titular character.
- Irish Country & Western singer Daniel O'Donnell and his guests sing some of their favourite songs in weekly series.
- A young woman sits down in a chair. Only her mouth is visible as she begins to speak at a rapid clip, describing events that she insists did not really happen to her.
- An old man listens to a tape of himself as a thirty-nine-year-old.
- A hot, thirsty man in the desert is tormented when the things he needs drop from the sky only to disappear again or hover out of his reach.
- After the failed insurrection of 1916, revolutionary Ireland reorganized and devised new tactics that would eventually lead to the country's independence. Such important figures as Michael Collins and Éamon de Valera emerged on the world media stage as leaders of the Irish revolutionary struggle, facing British political heavyweights such as Winston Churchill and Lloyd George. The tactics, both in guerrilla warfare and in radicalizing the Irish population, would eventually force a British withdrawal and a treaty leading to an independent Irish state.
- Slí na mBeaglaoich follows Breanndán and Cormac Begley on a musical journey along the west coast of Ireland - from Kerry To Donegal. Travelling in their old van they will celebrate the unique music of each county and meet friends, musicians and artists along the way.
- The show aimed to find a young football player who could be the "next big thing" and reward them with a professional contract at Celtic F.C. in Scotland. The series was presented by former Westlife member and Celtic fan Nicky Byrne.
- Lexie is a single parent father of a young girl. One day, coming home from work, he is told by her that she wants to be am Irish River Dancer. He refuses, replying laconically, 'We don't dance'. With time, her fascination grows and he begrudgingly becomes acceptant of her passion, helping her out with an instructional video and then a costume. She enters a contest, and he enthusiastically applauds her performance. In the final scene, she teaches him a few steps as they move together along the shore.
- The thrilling Riverdance show live from Geneva.
- A reader tells a sad story to a listener, who only knocks in response.
- Jean Butler introduces this look back at the Riverdance phenomenon.
- Daytime TV afternoon lifestyle programme for Radio Telefis Eireann (RTE), Ireland.
- A live, daily talk show offering the best in topical discussion and entertainment.
- There are five survivors in a futuristic library. Bam is their supreme dictator, and has the others interrogated and tortured, believing them to have said where. What Bam means is unclear, but he distrusts all.
- The camera swoops down on a circular area, seemingly suspended in space. It is filled with medical waste and other trash. A labored exhalation is heard. Then it stops. Then it starts again, culminating in a windy, dying sigh.
- As the rain patters outside, an old man talks to himself about birth, death, funerals, lamps, missing pictures and "loved ones" - a term he perpetually avoids using.
- Irish Economist David McWilliams investigates the causes of the Economic crisis arising from the last decade.
- This is a documentary that focuses on Riverdance as an extraordinary cultural phenomenon. Starting with the enormous success that the show has achieved to date throughout the world we will follow the production to Beijing, seeing it as an important cultural engagement between Ireland and China while also documenting what it takes to bring a show of this scale to a foreign location. Through the documentary we get to know the principle players behind the scenes while also following the dancers and musicians getting a sense of their impressions of China and their experience of traveling so far from home. The documentary follows every detail of putting the show together in Beijing from the first truck arriving at the People's Hall right through to the curtain call of the Gala night and in the process, brings viewers a real sense of the enormous undertaking involved in this major international show. Pursuing the idea of seeing the Riverdance phenomenon from all angles the documentary follows the show at the People's Hall and the preparations that take place before the cast set foot in the theatre. It follows rehearsals and intercut with amazing footage of the dancers on the Great Wall of China and out and about in experiencing everyday life in Beijing and their engagement with the people and the city. The documentary features interviews with all they key creatives that make up the backbone of the show. Riverdance is a modern manifestation of Ireland's ancient culture so it's timely that Ireland brings Riverdance to China, the oldest surviving culture in the world but a culture that is embarking on the most radical cultural and social evolution ever undertaken by a nation in one generation.
- On a strip of film exist a pile of clothes and two men in bags. The two men conduct their lives in isolation of each other: when one is awake, the other is asleep in his bag.
- Based on his best selling book David McWilliams authors a three-part series examining the economic and social landscape of Ireland in 2006.
- 2nd annual awards, organised by Irish Film and Television Network (IFTN).
- The programme celebrates ordinary people who do extraordinary things. Each week the programme will surprise three unsuspecting members of the public and make their Dreams Come True.
- An old woman in a rocking chair listens to a disembodied voice (her own) that recounts her life and that of her mother's. When the voice stops, she calls for more.
- Two bureaucrats discuss the potential suicide of a man standing perfectly still in front of a door that opens into the night sky and a fatal drop.
- An examination on the enduring appeal of the Irish ballad "Danny Boy" on the 100th anniversary of its publication.