Sir, – It’s unfair that Justine McCarthy (“Revelations about them-and-us culture at top in RTÉ not new”, Opinion, July 7th) seeks to drag my name into the current controversy surrounding RTÉ.
I was head of TV current affairs for 15 years and in that time attracted only one official complaint from a staff member. I sought to make sure that staff were always treated fairly and with understanding, and that the licence payer got a good deal as well.
That’s not always an easy balance to achieve. I wasn’t a perfect boss but I stand over my record in people management as well as in journalism and TV production. As a manager you have control over your own actions but ultimately you can’t control how those actions are perceived by staff. When there’s a dispute, they often hear one side of the story. Misperceptions and myths abound and grow in the re-telling.
It’s open season now on RTÉ managers but most of us do our best. – Yours, etc,
Mark O'Connell: I bought into the idea that wellness guru Andrew Huberman could fix my life. Then I read about him
I visited Singapore to see why it is ranked as the top education system in the world. Here’s what I learned
Irish influence inside the EU: ‘The conveyor belt is slowing down’
What now for the Green agenda after its main political advocate was almost wiped out in the election?
DAVID NALLY
Former head of TV current affairs, RTÉ