RTE – Storm Front in Mayo The Story of the D-Day Forecast

RTE – Storm Front in Mayo: The Story of the D-Day Forecast (2019)
English | Size: 1.08 GB
Category: Tutorial


For a few tense days in June 1944, the success of the greatest military invasion the world had ever seen depended on weather readings taken by 21-year-old Maureen Sweeney at the remote Blacksod weather station on Ireland’s west coast.

RTE – Eurovisions (2017)

RTE – Eurovisions (2017)
English | Size: 1.13 GB
Category: Documentary

Explores the enduring fascination of the Eurovision – an event that creates trans-European shared memories and uncannily anticipates European social trends. Each May, 40 European and not-so-European countries from Ireland to Azerbaijan send pop groups or singers to represent them in a contest between nations, filmed simultaneously by multiple television channels. With its classic pop numbers, catchy refrains, razzamatazz and over-the-top lighting, the annual ritual of the Eurovision Song Contest has held audiences spellbound for decades. Each country sees it differently. The Scandinavians and East Europeans love it. The French and British are more ambivalent. But year after year, it goes on attracting the biggest television audiences in the world. Almost 200 million viewers switch on to cheer their favourites.

RTE – The Boys in Green (2020)

RTE – The Boys in Green (2020)
English | Size: 1.50 GB
Category: Documentary

Tells the story of the greatest period in the history of Irish football, as the achievements of Jack Charlton’s team put Irish football firmly on the global map.
From 1986 to 1995, the team that Jack built inspired unparalleled scenes of joy in the country and laid the foundation stones for Irish football for future generations.

RTE – Hot Air Ireland’s Climate Crisis (2019)

RTE – Hot Air Ireland’s Climate Crisis (2019)
English | Size: 1.63 GB
Category: Documentary

Hot Air Ireland’s Climate Crisis
The climate crisis discussion tends to be dominated by talk of the scale of the problem. In this documentary Philip Boucher Hayes examines what it is going to take for Ireland to play its part in solving the problem. He also identifies the gap between what the science says we must do and what the government and corporations are actually doing.