Thursday TV Tips: Can they convert a crumbling cottage into a high-spec dream home? and can a local doula help give a positive birth after a difficult labour the last time?
Eoin McGee presents How To Be Good With Money on RTÉ One
Thu, 18 Feb, 2021 - 15:00
Caroline Delaney TG4, 8pm
A new four-part series exploring the journey to parenthood and postpartum. Follow the story of expectant mothers and explore various issues that some parents encounter on the complex journey from the womb to childbirth.
Priscilla de Búrca brings TG4 along on her pregnancy journey in Turas Clainne.
Prisscilla de Búrca is in her third trimester of pregnancy however, she is still harbouring feelings of worry and anxiety due to the difficult labour she experienced with her second child two years ago. Prisscilla seeks advice from a local doula to help her prepare for a positive birthing experience this time around. Will all go to plan in the delivery suite?
Saturday TV Tips: Hours of rugby and how not to deal with a horrible boss and exam students and Shakespeare fans might enjoy Alan Rickman in Romeo and Juliet tomorrow
Horrible Bosses follows three unhappy workers hate their bosses
Sat, 13 Feb, 2021 - 11:40
Caroline Delaney Virgin Media One
Scotland v Wales (ko 4.45pm) is the crunch tie in round two of the Northern Hemisphere’s top rugby competition. England v Italy is the curtain-raiser (ko 2.15pm). And on Sunday, Ireland takes on France in Dublin (ko 3pm).
AFL Aussie Rules Na mBan TG4, 5.10pm
Coverage from the third round of the Australian Football League Women’s (AFLW) season. Australia’s national semi-professional Australian rules football league for female players will have 14 teams participating in the competition. Irish players include Cora Staunton, Sinéad Goldrick, Sarah Rowe and Niamh McEvoy. The AFL Women’s began on the last weekend of January with teams battling it out over 12
I didn’t know where Cork was : Hamilton star on walking in Frederick Douglass footsteps
Since arriving in Ireland for an event to celebrate the life of the anti-slavery campaigner, Paul Oakley Stovall has been moved by what he s discovered
Paul Oakley Stovall with Fionnuala O Connell of Cork Migrant Centre at the launch of the Douglass in Ireland exhibition, at Nano Nagle Place. Picture: Clare Keogh
Wed, 10 Feb, 2021 - 16:05
Marjorie Brennan
This time last year, Paul Oakley Stovall was playing the role of George Washington in the musical phenomenon Hamilton and enjoying every minute of it. Then Covid struck and everything changed, the iconic show created by Lin-Manuel Miranda just one of the thousands of productions that went dark around the world due to lockdown.