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Doireann Garrihy is the presenter as Podge & Rodge return to RTÉ.
Doireann Garrihy is the presenter as Podge & Rodge return to RTÉ.

RTÉ HAS ANNOUNCED the details of its autumn season of programming, with director-general Dee Forbes declaring the line-up as a “statement of intent” by the broadcaster.

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Included in its already confirmed schedule are a number of new drama series, factual programming and some old and new comedy programming.

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RTÉ is to provide greater details on the programmes at a launch later this afternoon, but this is what we know so far about what’s in store over the coming months.

Drama

The broadcaster has singled out a new drama from the team behind Love/Hate as something to watch out for. Taken Down said to be a detective drama in which the central character “investigates the death of a young Nigerian immigrant found abandoned close to a Direct Provision Centre”. Directx 11 windows 7.

Love/Hate director Stephen Carolan is among those behind the show with Brian Gleeson starring alongside Senegalese-born French actress Aissa Maiga.

After the successful Easter Rising drama Rebellion, RTÉ returns to the nation’s birth with War of Independence drama Resistance, Gleeson is again a cast member.

Northern Ireland is also portrayed in on RTÉ screens with a number of programmes, one called Death and Nightingales set in the 1880s and a Troubles drama set in the aftermath of the IRA’s Warrington bombing called Mother’s Day.

Comedy and entertainment

RTÉ has revealed that a number of comedy programmes are making a return, with Podge and Rodge back on our screens and Bridget & Eamon also getting another run.

Amy Huberman is set to front a new comedy series called Finding Joy which also features Aisling Bea and Laura Whitmore.

The ever-popular Dancing with the Starsis also back for third season but there is no indication yet who’ll be taking to the dance floor.

Who we are

RTÉ says that it will be celebrating Irish identity as part of the programming with a number of shows focusing on our relationship with Britain.

Popular genealogy show Who Do You Think You Are? has a diverse line-up of people tracing their roots. Bertie Ahern, Laura Whitmore, Damien Dempsey, Adrian Dunbar, Pat Shortt and Samantha Power will be doing just that.

After his years portraying Mrs. Brown in one of Ireland and the UK’s most popular sitcoms, Brendan O’Carroll is to present a show “exploring the historic, sometimes turbulent bonds between Ireland and Britain”.

Other eye-catching shows include Street Art, about the burgeoning urban culture in Irish towns and Shooting the Darkness about amatuer war photographers during The Troubles.

Documentary

There’s a whole raft of documentaries, among them is Dublin footballer Philly McMahon exploring illicit drug use in The Hardest Hit and journalist Dearbhail McDonald looking Ireland’s slowing birth rate in Fertility Shock.

This year marks 100 year since the momentous 1918 election and Prime Time’s David McCullough will present a show that reenacts “how it would have been covered by modern television” in a “special event” called Election 1918.

Viewers are to get a look at Ireland’s groundbreaking boxing champion Katie Taylor in a documentary film that follows her training now as a professional.

The film, Katie, is by documentary-maker Ross Whitaker and promises to show the path she’s taken to rebuild her career after defeat in the 2016 Olympics.

RTÉ will attempt to crown Ireland’s Greatest Sportsperson among contenders fromthe 1960s to the 2000s, following a similar format that sought to find Ireland’s Greatest Sporting Moment last year.

IF A NATION’S greatness depends upon the education of its people, then surely teachers play a pivotal role in unlocking the potential of a generation.

Teachers encourage their pupils to be kind, upstanding citizens but sometimes the teachers themselves are faced with challenging attitudes in the workplace. Recently, LGBT+ teachers, from primary schools across the country, shared stories of their experiences in Irish schools.

Shared Experience

On RTÉ Morning Ireland recently, Damian McGrath, now retired, spoke of his time as a young teacher in 1979. “When I was a young teacher, you were afraid, you were ashamed of being [openly] gay with your colleagues and you certainly felt that you couldn’t let your students know you were gay, so you had to hide it from them and I think doubly so hiding it from their parents. This whole mask was being maintained.”

Jean Louise McCarthy, a relatively new teacher, reflected on the impact of changes to the Equality Act in 2015 which sought to rebalance the rights of the employee with those of the ethos of religious institutions: Norton antivirus renewal.

The law is changed but there’s still the schools where you cannot be yourself. I now have permanency, and this is the first time that I’ve been openly out and comfortable being out as a gay woman. You’re constantly censoring yourself, you say ‘my partner’, you use the plural, you say ‘they’ instead of ‘she’ or ‘he’, depending who it is, it’s a constant battle with yourself – do I show who I really am, or do I protect my job?

Others spoke of the ever-present fear of becoming the next big scandal in the school, of having a parent demand that they be removed from a classroom.

Sean Hegarty, secretary of the Irish National Teachers’ Organisation’s (INTO’s) LGBT Group confirms similar stories are regularly heard by the group and confirms that school leaders can play a critical role in creating environments of inclusion.

Solidarity

The INTO, the nation’s oldest and largest education union, sought to share these stories of gay teachers to encourage debate and a better understanding of the issues that still exist in schools. In fact, INTO were the first teaching union in Ireland to create an LGBT group to support and advocate for LGBT+ teachers within the membership.

Ahead of Dublin Pride, the INTO also temporarily re-branded, in a show of support and solidarity with LGBT+ teachers, students and the wider community in Ireland.

While Pride is a celebration of the advances that the LGBT+ community has made over many years, it’s also an opportunity to reflect on the challenges that remain. In a country where you can marry your same-sex partner yet be attacked for holding their hand in public, or where so many remain in the closet professionally in so many sectors for fear of bias and discrimination, it’s clear more remains to be done.

A specially-commissioned INTO pride logo, reflecting INTO’s 150-year journey has been created and is being used across the organisation for the week of 25 June 2018, coinciding with Dublin Pride weekend where INTO’s Teachers’ LGBT Group will be marching.

As we reflect on INTO’s 150-year journey of activism and advocacy, it’s important that we also look forward and face the challenges that remain. INTO has always worked with its LGBT+ members to make classrooms and schools a place of inclusion where teachers are free to be their authentic selves.

INTO recognises, however, the ongoing challenges facing not just LGBT+ teachers but the wider community and our small gesture ahead of Dublin Pride is aimed at demonstrating our commitment as an ally in the coming years.

Sheila Nunan is the General Secretary of the Irish National Teachers’ Organisation.