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Brendan O'Connor (born 23 January 1970) is an Irish media personality and former comedian. He presents the Current Affairs panel show Cutting Edge on RTÉ.He presented The Saturday Night Show on RTÉ from 2010 to 2015, he is also known for his columns in the Sunday Independent newspaper. [4]
The Saturday Night Show is a talk show hosted by Brendan O'Connor broadcast on RTÉ One between 2010 and 2015. The show features guest interviews, audience participation and live music. The Saturday Night Show is broadcast every Saturday night during the autumn-spring season directly after RTÉ News: Nine O'Clock, the main evening news bulletin ...
David O'Connor was a twenty-six-year-old former racing jockey from Ferns, County Wexford. [2] He had an accident after twenty-five races and went on to represent Ireland in the 2004 Karaoke World Championships in Finland. [17] O'Connor auditioned in Monaghan where he sang "Two Outta Three Ain't Bad" by Meat Loaf and came second in the public vote.
How To Make My Millionaire Crackers. For about 38 crackers, you’ll need: 1 sleeve Club (or similar) crackers, about 38 crackers. 2 ounces cream cheese or Boursin cheese, room temperature
For RTE television, he wrote for The Live Mike, The Late Late Show, Twink and many others. He wrote for stage, revue and stand-up comedians. He was one of the main contributors to the popular RTÉ satirical radio programme Green Tea starring Oliver Callan. He also wrote for Brendan O'Connor and for Callan's Kicks.
Brendan O'Carroll (born 17 September 1955) is an Irish actor, comedian, director, producer and writer. He is best known for portraying foul-mouthed matriarch Agnes Brown on stage and in the BBC and RTÉ television sitcom Mrs. Brown's Boys . [ 2 ]
Don't Feed the Gondolas is an Irish comedy panel show, that ran for four series on Network 2 between 1997 and 2001. The show was hosted by Seán Moncrieff and the longest-serving panellists were Brendan O'Connor and Dara Ó Briain.
The song came from Brendan O'Connor's satirical character "Fr. Brian" on Don't Feed the Gondolas (a comedy game show shown on RTÉ in the late 90s). A rap style song, it parodies the Catholic Church's attempts to be "cool" and "down with the kids" and contains the immortal chorus: "Who's in the House? Jesus in the House".