Silence from Duffy: “He trampled on Gerry’s memory” – Radio show star’s fans remain adamant Keith Duffy owes Lottie Ryan an apology over throwaway remark – TheLiberal.ie – Our News, Your Views



Silence from Duffy: “He trampled on Gerry’s memory” – Radio show star’s fans remain adamant Keith Duffy owes Lottie Ryan an apology over throwaway remark




People have been commenting that Gerry Ryan may have had his faults, but he was incredible on the radio and that they listened to him every morning.

Add to that, they’re saying that they enjoy reminiscing about him around the time of his anniversary.

So far there’s been silence from Keith Duffy as many social media users are calling on Keith Duffy to apologise to Lottie Ryan following her interview on the Late Late Show.

One social media user went so far as to say that “he trampled on Gerry’s memory”.

RTÉ’s The Late Late Show veered into controversy when Keith Duffy, one-half of Boyzlife with Brian McFadden, ignited a firestorm with remarks that landed like a sledgehammer.

The blunder came right after Lottie Ryan’s gut-wrenching interview about her late father, Gerry Ryan, a segment that had left the audience raw and reverent. Duffy’s tactless attempt to shift gears drew instant fury, tainting a night that should’ve stayed sacred to Lottie’s tribute.

Lottie’s moment was pure and piercing. The 2FM presenter, now 39, opened up about her love for Gerry, who died suddenly in 2010 at 53 from cardiac arrhythmia, and her quiet hope that he’d be proud of her and her family today. She declared she loved her father with her voice cracking as she recalled his devotion—like the mornings he’d skip his own radio show’s opening to drive her to school during her bullied teenage years. “I just hope he’d be proud of me, of all of us,” she added, a line that cut deep for anyone who’s known loss. Host Patrick Kielty gave her space, the studio heavy with the weight of her words, a fitting nod to Gerry’s towering legacy.

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Enter Keith Duffy, who promptly stomped all over it. Barely a breath after Lottie’s tears, the ex-Boyzone crooner kicked off his segment with a smug, “We’re here for a good time, not a long time,” followed by, “Heavy show so far, we have to lighten it up,” grinning like he’d just cracked a winner. The audience froze, stunned, and social media exploded. “Keith Duffy just spat on Lottie Ryan’s beautiful tribute with that garbage,” one X user raged. Another hissed, “Clueless and crass—way to ruin a moment, Keith.” The backlash was swift and merciless.

It wasn’t just bad timing—it was a grotesque misread. Lottie had just bared a 15-year wound, a daughter’s love laid bare, and Duffy’s glib “short time” line felt like a cheap jab at her grief’s permanence. His “lighten it up” push was worse—a callous shrug, as if her pain was an inconvenience to his spotlight. “Disrespectful doesn’t even cover it,” one viewer snapped on X. “Gerry Ryan deserved reverence, not Keith Duffy’s clown act.” Another branded it “tone-deaf beyond belief,” a sentiment that roared through the night’s online chatter.

Duffy, 50, plowed on, oblivious or uncaring, diving into Boyzlife nostalgia with McFadden as if nothing had happened. But the stench of his words clung to the show. Lottie’s vulnerability had honoured a legend; Duffy’s flippancy turned it into a punching bag. He’s no stranger to loss—his own tears for Boyzone’s Stephen Gately are well-documented—but last night, he showed none of that depth, just a shallow need to play the fool. “Keith Duffy owes Lottie an apology, full stop,” one X post demanded. Another fumed, “He’s got no business on that stage after that.”

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