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Published 12:30 20 Jun 2022 BST
Updated 12:32 20 Jun 2022 BST
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Add in the likes of Soccer AM, and no one can say that Sky aren't using every single ounce of value they can get out of having the rights to the Premier League.
Dublin legend Philly McMahon has recently been hitting out about the constant negativity that the selected pundits seem to induce on RTÉ, and how that influences the viewers into thinking that the games they are watching are worse than they actually are.
Former Laois star Colm Parkinson has always been critical of the channel's lack of coverage throughout the week, and openly admits to preferring the BBC coverage during the Ulster championship.
https://twitter.com/TheSundayGame/status/1538503144459714563
Joe Brolly, a former RTÉ pundit, absolutely slammed them in an interview with Tomas O Sé, claiming that his former employers were "boring," and have sucked all the fun out of it.
Throw in the fact that they are the national broadcaster of the country and everyone has to pay their license fee, meaning that viewers feel more obliged than ever to be critical when they see fit.
However, after a very good weekend of football where the hurling quarter finals were in full flow, with Sunday dedicated entirely to the Tailteann Cup, and RTÉ have come out swinging.
In a tweet that is pretty left-field from their usual content, those in the know at the station decided to list the amount of coverage, pundits, and work that went into covering last weekend.
Each thing that they listed was pretty much a direct reply to every criticism they have had to endure in recent times, and it had more sass than a Taylor Swift breakup song.
12 hours live TV. 10 hours live radio. 2hr hilites show. Across 2 days. 3 venues. 4 different panels. 2 x Hurling Quarters. 2 x Tailteann semis. Special guests. New voices. Analysis. Tributes. Awards. Credit to all in front and behind the camera. #LicenceFee #RTEGAA #SundayGame https://twitter.com/TheSundayGame/status/1538637449508933633The full stop after each statement, the hashtag for the License fee, and the emphasis on the use of fresh new pundits - they may as well have tagged each of their critics personally and threw in the middle finger emoji. Not that this is a bad thing, if RTÉ are getting their act together, and are on a mission to defiantly silence those who say they aren't doing enough, then we, the viewers, will be the beneficiaries of that.
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