Dragged Into the Spotlight
When Panti, the alter ego of Irish drag performer Rory ONeill, called out several journalists and members of the conservative Catholic group Iona Institute as homophobic early last year on The Saturday Night Show, her targets sued the Irish public media service RTÉ. Fearing a legal battle, RTÉ paid out over $100,000 in damages. The uproar over the payments was dubbed the Pantigate scandal, and it became the most high-profile event in the debate over LGBT rights in Ireland.
In early May, after years of starts and stops, Ireland is set to hold a referendum on marriage equality. Ireland could become the last major Western European nation to extend the right to same-sex couples, and it will be the first country in the world to put the issue to a popular vote.
I think the government would be thrilled if they didnt have to [hold a referendum] and they could just do it legislatively, because they have the votes.We run to the constitution way too much, so were constantly having to change it, ONeill explains.
On the face of it, things look promising. Polls show that as much as 80% of Irish people support marriage equality, substantially higher than the United States (55%), United Kingdom (68%), France (68%) and even Norway (78%). But ONeill warns that in Ireland, when debate begins in earnest, doubts sown by conservative scaremongering can bring seemingly assured victories down to the wire.
http://www.advocate.com/world/2015/03/03/dragged-spotlight
This is where the spotlight shined on her about a year ago.