Pac1Man wrote: » What about the bums though?
ohnonotgmail wrote: » Does it impede your life in some way?
The Young Wan wrote: » Is it time to put it out to pasture?
CeilingFly wrote: » not one cent of licence fee money is needed for it
CeilingFly wrote: » It makes a profit, it's on TV in mid week in August, not one cent of licence fee money is needed for it - if you don't like it you neither need to be involved nor watch it. hence it can stay for as long as it likes for those who wish to watch it.
Oasis1974 wrote: » Surely in 2017 this poor excuse for carrot cruncher porn should be taken off the air. Herding women on to a stage and treating them like spastics just typify us Oirish.
Pac1Man wrote: » Depends how big they are.
seamus wrote: » It'll exist as long as people want it to exist. There are microcosms all over the country of things that are huge to one group and meaningless to everyone else - Rose of Tralee, Ploughing Championships, the Galway Races, Dublin Theatre Festival, Cork Jazz Festival. You will find people for whom each of these things are personally a massive event, one of their main events in the calendar, for them the event was a highlight of their upbringing, as much as Xmas or Paddy's Day. While the rest of us have never and will never attend it because we're not interested. One of the previous winners was on the radio on Friday talking about what a big event it is for everyone, how everyone grows up watching the festival and dreaming about being there, the great buzz in the lead up to it. And all I could think about what how she clearly lives in a very different world from I. And that's how it is. The RoT will continue so long as there are people who watch it.
Last week 2016 Sydney Rose Brianna Parkins urged for women from more diverse backgrounds to enter the competition. She Tweeted: “I need to hand over the tiara and sash soon. Calling all boss ladies to apply for 2017. “Calling all feminists/mixed race/queer/trans ladies to apply for the Rose wherever you live. I would just like to see the Rose reflect modern Irish society at home and abroad. “It can be intimidating to minorities as they might not have been represented in the past. “I’m a hetero white woman with a degree and even I felt I wasn’t “Rose” enough. “It makes it a hell of a lot more interesting if you have people with different life stories on stage.”
Irish Guitarist wrote: » Letting women from outside Ireland enter still seems like an act of desperation to keep it going. It worked for a while but the old fashioned Irishness of the thing doesn't really seem in line with attracting American women or 'feminists' who want to completely change what it is.
seamus wrote: » ... It became an "International" competition in 1967. So if it was a desperate act to "keep it going", then it seems to have worked. The point being made in that piece is that the competition is still largely a lovely girls competition featuring white Irish women of the diddly extraction. Whereas it might be appealing to a much wider audience if you had a black girl from Buncrana performing a traditional Morrocan dance.
topper75 wrote: » There is really no male interest in it though.
Irish Guitarist wrote: » Letting women from outside Ireland enter still seems like an act of desperation to keep it going. It worked for a while but the old fashioned Irishness of the thing doesn't really seem in line with attracting American women or 'feminists' who want to completely change what it is.http://www.irishmirror.ie/whats-on/whats-on-news/transgender-women-barred-entering-rose-9742040