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George Hook

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Nationality
  
Irish

Role
  
Broadcaster

Name
  
George Hook


Religion
  
Roman Catholicism

Height
  
1.90m (6ft 3in)

Spouse
  
Ingrid Hook (m. 1969)

George Hook imagejpg

Born
  
19 May 1941 (age 82) (
1941-05-19
)
Cork, Ireland

Other names
  
The Alpha Male, Hooky, The Hooky Monster

Occupation
  
Journalist and Radio Broadcaster

Children
  
Alison, George Junior and Michelle

Books
  
Time Added On: The Autobiography, This Is Rugby

Profiles

'This Country Gave Him a Bloody Good Living!' George Hook on Eamon Dunphy


George Hook does the ice bucket challenge


George Hook (born 19 May 1941) is an Irish broadcaster, journalist and rugby union pundit. He formerly hosted High Noon on the Irish radio station Newstalk and is a member of the popular sports media website, Pundit Arena.

Contents

George Hook WATCH George Hook angered at TV3 grilling Music News

He had a career as a rugby union coach and businessman, before becoming a rugby pundit on RTÉ Television in 1997. He has also made other TV appearances, such as judging on Jigs & Reels and coaching on Celebrity Bainisteoir.

George Hook wwwbroadsheetiewpcontentuploads201008georg

Life

George Hook Why George Hook Hates Neil Francis39s Guts Broadsheetie

Hook grew up in Cork in a Jewish family. He converted to Roman Catholicism and attended Presentation Brothers College, a rugby union stronghold. Subsequently, he attended Rathmines College of Commerce. On his proud Christian Brothers upbringing Hook commented that "I am proud that Presentation College accepted Jewish boys when the State system was closed to them".

Hook has had a number of jobs, beginning as a temporary clerk for CIÉ, and later becoming a travelling salesman for the Burroughs Corporation (now Unisys). He ran a catering business for over twenty years. He coached London Irish and Connacht as well as the United States national team in the 1987 Rugby World Cup.

The Right Hook, Hook's radio show on Newstalk, is a popular late afternoon to early evening drive-time programme. His wife, "the lovely Ingrid", is regularly subjected to having her intimate details discussed and dissected on air by Hook.

Hook appears as a rugby pundit on RTÉ on a regular basis and appeared as a judge on RTÉ celebrity dancing show Jigs & Reels. He has also been parodied in The State of Us. In 2005, he published an autobiography, "Time Added On". The book described his years involved in business and the failure of this career path.

In 2009, he visited Haiti where he organised a recruitment drive to get volunteers to go there on a house building week.

The next day a vicious earthquake struck Haiti. After the earthquake Hook was heard to say: "It is a godforsaken place. God has literally forsaken it." Following the January 2010 earthquake. Hook urged his radio listeners to donate money.

Hook is also the patron of Comber Foundation, an Irish charity working in Romania since 1991, of which his daughter Michelle McGill is a trustee. The charity provides homes in the community for adults with disabilities who grew up in institutions and orphanages

Politically, Hook is a longtime supporter of Fine Gael, frequently identifying himself on The Right Hookas being "an old Blueshirt".

In 2010, as part of the Catholic Church's "Year for Priests" celebration, he contributed to a DVD, In Praise of Priests, featuring interviews with various people expressing admiration for their favourite priest.

On 26 January 2014, Hook announced that he would retire from Newstalk in 2016 and television punditry after the 2015 Rugby World Cup but RTÉ lost the right for Irish broadcasting to TV3. On 13 February 2015, he reversed his decision to retire from television punditry. However, on March 17 of the same year, Hook announced that he would retire from television punditry saying he would never watch the RTÉ rugby panel again.

In September of 2017 he was suspended by Newstalk for comments about rape.

References

George Hook Wikipedia