Like any self-respecting broadcaster, RTÉ was on the
spot when the new Pope was introduced to the world last Wednesday
evening and it provided engrossing coverage of this extraordinary ritual
– no matter what one's religious persuasion, there's nothing to beat
pomp and ceremony when staged by experts at putting on a good show.
The problem, though, was that RTÉ had been on the spot for the
previous four weeks.
Ever since Pope Benedict announced his retirement a
month ago, you'd be forgiven for thinking that RTÉ's news department
was based in Rome rather than Donnybrook, with round-the-clock bulletins
from Bryan Dobson, Eileen Dunne, Sean O'Rourke, Miriam O'Callaghan, Joe
Little, Fergal Keane, Tony Connolly, Fran McNulty, Uncle Tom Cobley and
all.
Indeed, for the last four weeks it sometimes seemed that the only RTÉ
people not enjoying the clement weather, charming hotels and culinary
delights of the Italian capital were Marty Whelan, Bláthnaid Ní Chofaigh
and the cast of Fair City.
It was all a bit strange. We're constantly being assured by earnest
pundits that – in the wake of clerical sex scandals which have eroded
respect for the Church – we're now living in a post-Catholic Ireland,
but no one seems to have told RTÉ.
Indeed, whenever the station is not
getting into trouble for libelling blameless members of the clergy it
reverts to its traditional stance of dutiful genuflection towards a
troubling institution and its Roman masters.
However, for those of its viewers who are no longer so tolerant of
the Catholic church, a month in the Eternal City has seemed an
inordinately long time to be spent by a state broadcaster that should be
more intent on addressing domestic problems which seem just as eternal
and an awful lot more pressing.