CHALLENGING TIMES
'''Challenging Times''' was a quiz show for teams representing higher education institutes in Ireland, both those in the Republic of Ireland and those in Northern Ireland. It was televised by RTÉ from 1991 to 2001, sponsored by ''The Irish Times'', and presented by Kevin Myers, then a columnist with that newspaper.[1]
The programme used a quizbowl format similar to that of ''University Challenge'' in the United Kingdom, which is itself a licensed version of the College Bowl format popular in the United States. Each year, 16 teams qualified for the televised knockout stages, with two teams of three competing in each programme up to the final.
The programme was cancelled after the 2001 series, at a time when RTÉ was in financial difficulties.[2]
The final of that series was postponed at short notice and an episode of ''The Simpsons'' was broadcast instead.[3]
Kevin Myers later complained that RTÉ had given ''The Irish Times'' no notice that the series was being discontinued,[4]
though RTÉ disputed this contention.[5]
The programme used a quizbowl format similar to that of ''University Challenge'' in the United Kingdom, which is itself a licensed version of the College Bowl format popular in the United States. Each year, 16 teams qualified for the televised knockout stages, with two teams of three competing in each programme up to the final.
The programme was cancelled after the 2001 series, at a time when RTÉ was in financial difficulties.[2]
The final of that series was postponed at short notice and an episode of ''The Simpsons'' was broadcast instead.[3]
Kevin Myers later complained that RTÉ had given ''The Irish Times'' no notice that the series was being discontinued,[4]
though RTÉ disputed this contention.[5]
| Contents |
| Finals |
| References |
Finals
| year | winner | runner-up |
|---|---|---|
| 1991[6] | St Patrick's College, Maynooth | University of Limerick |
| 1992 [7] | St Patrick's College, Maynooth | Trinity College, Dublin |
| 1993[8] | University College, Cork | Bolton Street College of Technology |
| 1994[9] | University College, Cork | Cork Regional Technical College |
| 1995 | University College, Galway | University of Limerick[10] |
| 1996 [11] | University College, Galway | Cork Regional Technical College |
| 1997[12] | Dublin City University | University of Limerick |
| 1998 [13] | University College, Dublin | Dublin Institute of Technology |
| 1999[14] | National University of Ireland, Maynooth | Dublin Institute of Technology |
| 2000 [15] | National College of Ireland[16] || National University of Ireland, Galway | |
| 2001[17] | University College, Cork | National University of Ireland, Galway |
References
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