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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784 episodes

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

    #676 Married to the Bookies: Would You Walk Away?

    05/03/2026 | 1h
    On this episode, Niall reads a powerful email from a listener who says she feels completely torn about the future of her marriage.
    The woman explains that before they got married her husband admitted he once had a gambling problem but promised he had stopped. Ten years later, while planning a family holiday, he told her he was short of money despite earning a good salary. Curious, she checked his phone while he was asleep and discovered that he had spent more than €600 on online gambling in just one month.
    When confronted, he said it was only small bets and insisted he could stop anytime. But her friends say he has already had his second chance and blew it. They believe gambling is an addiction that rarely goes away and are urging her to leave while she is still young.
    What makes the situation even more painful is her past. She grew up with a father who drank and gambled, often losing the mortgage money and causing constant stress at home. She fears history could repeat itself.
    The couple have a four year old child together and she says she still loves her husband, but she is terrified that if the gambling continues it could eventually destroy their family financially and emotionally.
    Should she walk away now before things get worse, or should she stay and try to help him get support? Can gamblers truly change, or is it only a matter of time before the problem returns?
    Niall opens the phone lines and asks listeners what they would do in her situation.
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #675 Why Is Religion Cool Again for Young People?

    05/03/2026 | 1h 7 mins.
    On this episode of The Niall Boylan Podcast, Niall speaks with journalist and founder of the The Iona Institute, David Quinn, about a surprising new report commissioned by the Irish Catholic Bishops' Conference which suggests Ireland is still more religious than many people might think.
    The report, Turning the Tide? Recent Religious Trends on the Island of Ireland, examined a wide range of data sources including the European Social Survey, research from Amárach Research, the Central Statistics Office and international studies.
    One of the key findings is that Irish Catholics rank toward the higher end of religious practice in Europe. Around 31 percent of Catholics in Ireland say they attend Mass at least once a week, placing Ireland fourth overall in Europe alongside Italy and behind countries such as Poland and Slovakia.
    Prayer is also relatively common. About one third of Irish Catholic adults say they pray daily, putting Ireland near the top among Western European countries.
    However, the report highlights a major generational gap. Mass attendance among young people fell dramatically between 2002 and 2022, dropping from 41 percent of young Catholics attending weekly to just 7 percent. But interestingly, recent data shows a small rebound. Between 2022 and 2024, weekly Mass attendance among young Catholics rose from 7 percent to 17 percent, suggesting what some observers are calling a possible “quiet revival.”
    That’s exactly what David Quinn believes may be happening. He argues that religious belief among young people may be stronger than many assume, even in a modern Ireland that is often seen as increasingly secular and independent minded.
    The report also notes that immigration has changed the religious landscape, with the proportion of Catholics in Ireland who were born abroad rising from 6 percent in the early 2000s to 18 percent today. Meanwhile, Northern Ireland remains the most religious part of the island, with around 35 percent of adults attending religious services weekly, far higher than the UK average.
    But the picture is complex. Many younger believers still disagree strongly with church teachings, particularly around issues such as sexuality and relationships. Surveys suggest large majorities of young people believe the Church’s views on sexuality and homosexuality are outdated.
    So what does this all mean?
    Is religion quietly making a comeback in Ireland?
    Are young people rediscovering faith in a world that often feels uncertain?
    Or is Ireland continuing its long move toward a more secular society?
    Niall and David Quinn explore the data, the cultural shifts and what belief looks like in Ireland today.
    And Niall wants to hear from you.
    Do you consider yourself religious?
    Do you believe there is a higher power?
    Or has modern Ireland moved beyond religion entirely?
    .
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #677 She Was Rubbing Her Vagina off the Bread In The Supermarket!

    05/03/2026 | 13 mins.
    Ten years ago, Niall had one of the most outrageous and hilarious episodes in the show’s history. A caller rang in with a story that had everyone in stitches — and maybe slightly horrified. She was fed up with what she called the “supermarket runway”: women in lycra wandering the aisles, bending over and allegedly rubbing parts of themselves on the bread, and young men and women strutting around like the grocery store was their personal catwalk, showing off every toned muscle and tight outfit.
    Niall and the team couldn’t believe some of the visuals painted by the caller, sparking laughs, disbelief, and a flood of listener reactions. The episode turned into a chaotic, cheeky conversation about fashion, public decency, and why supermarkets suddenly felt more like a gym and less like a place to shop.
    Relive the madness, the laughs, and the stories that had listeners calling back with their own supermarket horror tales. It’s a classic mix of comedy, social commentary, and pure chaos — a reminder of why Niall’s show has kept people talking for over a decade.
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #673 Would Snubbing Trump Damage Ireland?

    04/03/2026 | 56 mins.
    Niall sits down with social commentator Paul Treyvaud to unpack one of the most talked-about political debates in Ireland right now: Should President Donald Trump be given a full Irish welcome — including official engagements with the Oireachtas — when he visits later this year?
    The talk began when former Ceann Comhairle Seán Ó Fearghaíl warned the Taoiseach that inviting Trump to address a joint sitting of the Dáil and Seanad would disrespect both Houses of the Oireachtas — a deeply symbolic institution in Irish democracy. That warning has sparked furious debate across the political spectrum.
    Meanwhile, the U.S. Ambassador to Ireland has confirmed that President Trump may visit Ireland in September 2026 during the Amgen Irish Open, which will for the first time be hosted at Trump International Golf Links & Hotel in Doonbeg, Co. Clare — a resort owned by Trump’s family trust.
    The potential visit is already controversial. Some argue that every American president deserves a traditional Irish welcome, pointing to the long history of close Ireland-U.S. ties and diplomatic goodwill. Others see Trump as a uniquely divisive figure whose record on issues such as immigration, international diplomacy and human rights makes him undeserving of official honours — especially when those honours would involve the Houses of the Oireachtas or state endorsement.
    Adding fuel to the fire, sections of the opposition have criticised the Government’s broader stance toward the U.S., accusing the Taoiseach of being too cautious — even “soft-pedalling” criticism of American policy on global conflicts — out of fear of jeopardising relations ahead of high-level meetings.
    So we’ll be asking:
    Should President Trump receive the same full Irish welcome that previous U.S. presidents have enjoyed?
    Or should Ireland draw a line and refuse official honours due to his politics and policies?
    Is canceling or downgrading any invitation a legitimate protest, or bad for diplomatic ties?
    Hear contrasting viewpoints, historical context, and what this debate says about Irish values, sovereignty and our place on the world stage. Niall and Paul Treyvaud will weigh up the arguments — and then we want you to call in and voice your opinion.
  • The Niall Boylan Podcast (They Told Me To Shut Up)

    #674 Would You Pay More to Save the Planet?

    04/03/2026 | 1h 17 mins.
    Niall tackles a major and increasingly heated global debate: our role as consumers and whether we should stop buying ultra-cheap products to help protect the environment and human rights.
    From the massive environmental damage caused by single-use plastics to the explosion of ultra-fast fashion and rock-bottom goods from online marketplaces, this episode digs into whether cheap really is too costly. Governments around Europe are already proposing taxes and new laws to curb fast fashion and make companies account for their environmental harm. France’s parliament has moved to regulate and even ban certain ultra-fast fashion marketing and impose eco-scores and fees on low-sustainability products.
    At the centre of this debate are brands like Shein and Temu, Chinese-linked online retailers that have reshaped the global market by offering unbelievably low-priced clothes and products. Independent assessments have shown these platforms score extremely low on sustainability and worker protections — in one case, Temu scored zero points on environmental and human-rights performance in an industry ranking.
    Critics argue these business models fuel massive waste and environmental harm, with tiny percentages of clothing recycled and huge amounts of polyester and synthetic garments ending up in landfills, shedding microplastic pollution into oceans and ecosystems. Beyond environmental concerns, workforce conditions in supply chains are deeply troubling, with reports pointing to long hours, very low pay, unsafe workplaces and opaque labour practices — issues that make human-rights groups question whether such products should be sold at all.
    So here’s the question Niall wants to put to listeners:
    👉 Do you care enough about the environment and workers’ rights to stop buying cheap fast fashion and cut out ultra-low-cost Chinese goods like those from Shein and Temu?
    Are you willing to pay more and choose ethical brands to support human rights and reduce pollution?
    Or will you admit you’re a self-confessed hypocrite — saying it’s awful that we are polluting the world and supporting cheap labour, but still buying cheap products because of the price?

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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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