PodcastsSociety & CultureThe Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

Niall Boylan
The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)
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846 episodes

  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #738 Do We Need RTE? Or Are They Wasting Tax Payers Money?

    20/05/2026 | 1h 10 mins.
    On this episode of The Niall Boylan Podcast, Niall discusses the latest controversy surrounding RTÉ as fresh revelations emerge over pay discrepancies and allegations that some presenters were allegedly miscategorised as producers. With questions once again being raised about transparency, accountability and how licence fee money is being spent, many people are asking whether the national broadcaster has learned anything from the scandals of recent years.
    Adding fuel to the debate are reports that Director General Kevin Bakhurst is eager to retain Patrick Kielty on an even higher salary, despite continued falls in viewing figures for The Late Late Show. Critics argue that RTÉ is out of touch with the public, while supporters insist Ireland still needs a strong public service broadcaster.
    When challenged by Sinn Féin on the issue, Taoiseach Micheál Martin responded by asking: “Do we want public service broadcasting? Do we want the national broadcaster or not?”
    That’s the question Niall puts to listeners today. Has RTÉ lost the trust of the Irish public? Is it still value for money? Or despite the controversies, do we still need a national broadcaster in Ireland?
    As always, listeners share strong opinions, heated debate and personal views on whether RTÉ can ever rebuild public confidence.
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #739 Would Salary Transparency Destroy Workplaces?

    20/05/2026 | 1h
    On this episode of The Niall Boylan Podcast, Niall is joined by broadcaster and commentator Nick Delahanty to discuss the growing controversy surrounding salaries at RTÉ and whether pay transparency should become the norm in Ireland.
    Following fresh controversy at RTÉ, a proposal has now been made that the names and salaries of all staff earning more than €100,000 should be publicly disclosed. The debate was discussed on Prime Time and has reignited wider questions about secrecy around wages in both the public and private sectors.
    Supporters of salary transparency argue that publishing wages would expose unfair pay gaps, stop favouritism and prevent situations where employees doing the same job are paid vastly different salaries. Critics however say a person’s income is private and that publishing salaries could create resentment, workplace tension and unnecessary public scrutiny.
    Niall and Nick debate whether public servants funded by taxpayers should automatically have their salaries disclosed, and whether the same rules should apply to private companies. Has the culture of secrecy around pay allowed inequality to flourish? Or are we moving towards a society where privacy no longer exists?
    As always, listeners join the conversation with strong opinions on fairness, transparency, jealousy in the workplace and whether people really want to know what their colleagues earn.
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #736 The King Is Coming, Will Ireland Cheer Or Protest?

    19/05/2026 | 1h 4 mins.
    Journalist Laura Perrins joins Niall to discuss the news that King Charles III has accepted an invitation for an official state visit to Ireland following a meeting at Buckingham Palace with Irish President Catherine Connolly.
    If the visit goes ahead, it will mark only the second official state visit by a British monarch to Ireland since independence, following the historic visit of Queen Elizabeth II in 2011. Her four day trip was viewed by many as a hugely symbolic moment in Anglo Irish relations, particularly when she visited the Garden of Remembrance and honoured those who fought for Irish freedom. Her speech at Dublin Castle, where she opened with a few words in Irish, was praised around the world as a gesture of reconciliation and mutual respect.
    But not everyone welcomed that visit, and many republicans still strongly oppose any royal visit to Ireland. For some, the British monarchy remains a painful reminder of centuries of British rule, the Troubles, Bloody Sunday and the suffering experienced during Ireland’s struggle for independence. Critics argue that while relations between the two countries may have improved politically, history cannot simply be brushed aside.
    Others, however, believe a visit by King Charles would be another important step forward in modern relations between Ireland and Great Britain. Supporters say both countries have changed enormously in recent decades and point to the Good Friday Agreement, growing cooperation, trade, tourism and peace in Northern Ireland as proof that reconciliation matters. They argue that respectful diplomacy between neighbours is vital, even when the shared history is difficult and emotional.
    So, would you line the streets to welcome King Charles on an official visit to Ireland, or do you believe some wounds from the past can never truly heal?
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #737 My Womb, My Choice… Even If He Says No?

    19/05/2026 | 1h 1 mins.
    A devastated listener contacted the show after her husband admitted he no longer wants children, despite the couple spending more than ten years together and always talking about starting a family someday.
    Now aged 35, she says she feels time is running out. After years of putting careers, finances and busy schedules first, she recently suggested it was finally time to stop using contraception and try for a baby. But instead of excitement, her 42 year old husband shocked her by saying he now believes they are too old to become parents and that having a child would completely disrupt the life they have built together.
    She says she understands the pressure of modern life, demanding jobs and financial worries, but believes sacrifices can be made for something as important as becoming parents. She told Niall she feels heartbroken, betrayed and terrified she may lose her chance to ever become a mother.
    Things became even more complicated when a close friend advised her to secretly stop using contraception without telling her husband, insisting that once he sees a baby on the way he would eventually come around and accept it.
    But is secretly getting pregnant a desperate act from a woman afraid of losing her dream of motherhood, or is it a complete betrayal of trust within a marriage?
    On this episode, Niall asks listeners where they stand on one of the most emotionally divisive relationship dilemmas imaginable. If a couple always planned to have children, is it unfair for one partner to suddenly change their mind later in life? And if your biological clock was ticking, how far would you go to have the family you always dreamed of?
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #734 He Chose Marriage Over Being Gay… Now He Regrets It

    18/05/2026 | 1h 9 mins.
    On this episode of The Niall Boylan Podcast, Niall is joined by media producer AJ Walshe to discuss a deeply personal and emotional email sent in by a listener facing a life-changing decision.
    The man, now in his 40s, has been married for 15 years and is the father of three young children, all under the age of 10. He says he has known he was gay since his teenage years, but growing up in a different time, with the pressure to live a “normal” traditional life, he chose marriage and family instead.
    Over the years, he admits he secretly experimented with a number of brief relationships and hook-ups with men, all completely unknown to his wife. He says he genuinely loves his wife as a person and as the mother of his children, but he no longer feels sexually attracted to her and admits he has never truly been “in love” with her in that way.
    Now, after years of living what he describes as “a nightmare of a lie”, he says he feels he can’t continue pretending any longer. Some of his gay friends have encouraged him to “bite the bullet” and finally come out, saying he deserves to live honestly and openly. But his brother, the only family member who knows the truth, has urged him to stay silent until the children are adults, warning that coming out now could destroy his family and completely break the heart of a wife who “idolises” him.
    Niall and AJ debate the heartbreaking dilemma. Is it fair to continue living a lie for the sake of protecting his family? Or is it more cruel to hide the truth from the woman he married? Should he come out now and risk tearing his family apart, or keep the secret buried until the children are older?
    It’s a raw and emotional conversation about love, guilt, sexuality, honesty, family, and whether living authentically is worth the pain it may cause to the people closest to you.
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About The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)
Niall Boylan is online, and nobody can hold him back. Subscribe to The Niall Boylan Show and access premium content by visiting https://niallboylan.com

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