Visit our mobile site

The Globe and Mail

Jump to main navigation
Jump to main content

News Search
Search Stock Quotes
Search The Web
Search People at canada411.ca
Search Businesses at yellowpages.ca
Search Jobs at eluta.ca
Bio:

John Doyle is The Globe and Mail's television critic. His column appears in the Review section Monday to Thursday and on Saturday. He has been the paper’s critic since 2000. From 1995 to 2000 he was the critic for Broadcast Week, the Globe’s television magazine.

Born in Ireland, Doyle holds a BA in English Literature and an MA in Anglo-Irish Studies from University College, Dublin. He came to Canada in 1980 to pursue a PhD in English Literature at York University in Toronto. Having done some student and freelance journalism in Ireland, Doyle continued to write in Canada and eventually abandoned writing for academic reward to concentrate on writing for a money. After working briefly in radio and in television, he began writing a column for Broadcast Week in 1991.

Always argumentative, Doyle has the distinction of winning a gold medal, at the age of ten, for his debating skills in the Gaelic language. He has been widely published in Canada, the U.S., Britain and Ireland and lectured on television and other aspects of popular culture. In a profile of Doyle published in Toronto Life magazine in July, 2000, Robert Fulford wrote, "A critic as intelligent, industrious and ambitious as John Doyle should be cherished."

In 2004, Doyle was called less charitable names. His columns mocking the Fox News Channel on its arrival in Canada attracted the attention of Fox News star Bill O’Reilly, and the channel’s viewers wrote in their thousands to Doyle, often abusively. The battle between Doyle and Fox News viewers was the subject of international coverage, including a feature story in The New York Times.

Doyle has won two internal Globe and Mail awards for his writing. His Globe columns have been reprinted in the U.S., the U.K. and in Australia.

His book, A Great Feast of Light: Growing Up Irish in the Television Age (Doubleday Canada) was published to acclaim and bestseller status in Canada in October, 2005. The book has now been published in five countries: Canada, the U.S., Britain, Ireland and Australia. It has also been optioned for a feature film by Amaze Film & Television of Toronto.

Doyle also writes about soccer for The Globe and Mail and other publications. For the Globe he covered World Cup 2002 in Korea/Japan, Euro 2004 in Portugal, World Cup 2006 in Germany and Euro 2008 in Austria /Switzerland. He has also written extensively about soccer for The Guardian and The New York Times.

He has written essays for TV Quarterly (The Journal of The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences) and wrote the introduction to the book Rockburn: The CPAC Interviews (Penumbra Press, 2007). He was profiled in the book A Story To Be Told: Personal Reflections on the Irish Emigrant Experience in Canada (Liffey Press, Dublin, 2008).

Latest Columns:

Ten things about television that must be stopped

On ridiculous weather reports, riot porn and hating Megan Draper

Soviet nostalgia, the Royals, and Upstairs, Downstairs

Everyone in their place: The return of Upstairs, Downstairs feeds our nostalgia for a world of order

Tower deaths: the human cost of cellphone service

A new Frontline exposé reveals the horrifying number of deaths among those who work on the United States’ countless cellphone towers

An invaluable education in the pop-music racket

The 2012 Billboard Music Awards is the perfect primer for all things teen and bouncy

Why Thursday TV isn’t what it used to be

The program lineups are less than stellar and live events are what compel viewers to watch at a specific time

Television today is two things: spectacle and substance

Britney Spears on is something to gawp at, just like the Dancing With the Stars all-star edition coming this fall. Want substance? Think Mad Men or Big Bang Theory

Upfront Week: There’s no business like this mad TV business

Giddy optimism abounds amid a sea of free booze as networks pitch their planned fall strategies to advertisers in New York

Johnny Carson: The unknowable king of late-night TV

Carson was the most famous man in America. And yet, as this doc points out, utterly unknowable. What you saw on the screen is what you got

CBC Television wobbles forward, clueless

The public broadcaster unveils another fall TV season on Thursday. But it will only stride confidently forward when it aims for true distinction