Ryan Tubridy

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ryan_Tubridy an entity of type: Thing

Is láithreoir teilifíse agus raidió Éireannach é Ryan Tubridy, a rugadh ar 28 Bealtaine sa bhliain 1973. Is as an gCarraig Dhubh i mBaile Átha Cliath dó. rdf:langString
Ryan Tubridy (born 28 May 1973), nicknamed 'Fletch' is an Irish broadcaster. He presents The Ryan Tubridy Show and The Late Late Show. Tubridy previously presented RTÉ 2fm breakfast radio show The Full Irish, which at its end was the second most popular radio programme in Ireland. For five seasons from 2004 until 2009, he presented the Saturday night TV chat show Tubridy Tonight on RTÉ One. He later left RTÉ 2fm for a number of years to present The Tubridy Show on RTÉ Radio 1, but returned to RTÉ 2fm in 2010 to present a weekday morning radio show from 09:00 to 11:00, following the termination of The Gerry Ryan Show with the presenter's sudden death. He has also hosted the Rose of Tralee contest on two occasions. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Ryan Tubridy
rdf:langString Ryan Tubridy
rdf:langString Ryan Tubridy
rdf:langString Ryan Tubridy
rdf:langString Booterstown, Dublin, Ireland
xsd:date 1973-05-28
xsd:integer 304642
xsd:integer 1115431231
rdf:langString Incumbent
rdf:langString right
rdf:langString University College Dublin
rdf:langString Male human gazing at camera in a sepia photo
xsd:date 1973-05-28
rdf:langString Tubridy in Bray on his last day of presenting The Tubridy Show
xsd:integer 2
rdf:langString Carysfort National School
rdf:langString The Tubridy Show and The Ryan Tubridy Show on RTÉ Radio 1; The Full Irish and Tubridy on RTÉ 2fm; All Kinds of Everything, Tubridy Tonight and The Late Late Show on RTÉ One
rdf:langString Irish
rdf:langString Broadcaster, writer
rdf:langString You didn't ask permission. You didn't think about the consequences. You didn't care about the person I was with and their family, you didn't care about anything, you just cared about yourself and a grubby little cheque, and that's not right... have a bit of respect, or human decency.
rdf:langString It's not good for her mental health or her wellbeing. Her face contorted in pain, in agony and in anxiety. I was watching her and not thinking about the climate. I was thinking about my daughter and what would I do if I saw my 16-year-old's face contorted, talking about her childhood and life being robbed of her in that audience.
rdf:langString – (Tubridy was displeased with the paparazzi who "hid behind bushes and trees" to take photos of his romantic stroll with his then-girlfriend Aoibhinn Ní Shúilleabháin at Powerscourt Waterfall.)
rdf:langString Anne Marie Power
rdf:langString Host of The Late Late Show
rdf:langString Host of The Rose of Tralee
<perCent> 30.0
xsd:integer 2003 2009
rdf:langString Is láithreoir teilifíse agus raidió Éireannach é Ryan Tubridy, a rugadh ar 28 Bealtaine sa bhliain 1973. Is as an gCarraig Dhubh i mBaile Átha Cliath dó.
rdf:langString Ryan Tubridy (born 28 May 1973), nicknamed 'Fletch' is an Irish broadcaster. He presents The Ryan Tubridy Show and The Late Late Show. Tubridy previously presented RTÉ 2fm breakfast radio show The Full Irish, which at its end was the second most popular radio programme in Ireland. For five seasons from 2004 until 2009, he presented the Saturday night TV chat show Tubridy Tonight on RTÉ One. He later left RTÉ 2fm for a number of years to present The Tubridy Show on RTÉ Radio 1, but returned to RTÉ 2fm in 2010 to present a weekday morning radio show from 09:00 to 11:00, following the termination of The Gerry Ryan Show with the presenter's sudden death. He has also hosted the Rose of Tralee contest on two occasions. As part of a two-book deal with HarperCollins—and in a nod to his passion for U.S. politics—Tubridy penned JFK in Ireland, a profile of U.S. President John F. Kennedy's 1963 visit to Ireland. Tubridy's second book, The Irish Are Coming, about the influence of Irish people in the UK, was published in 2013. With several wins and nominations at the Meteor Awards to his name, dating from his time as host of The Full Irish, Tubridy was named one of ten "icons" of 21st century Ireland by the Sunday Tribune's Derek O'Connor in 2008.
rdf:langString Noel Kelly
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 89208
xsd:gYear 1973

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