In the second episode of the series, Bob
Geldof told Midge he wasn't impressed with Ireland's biggest musical export when he first heard them as a young band straight out of school.
If anything,
Geldof's attempts to highlight the plight of murdered Rohingya Muslims with his self-acknowledged "publicity stunt" will only seek to undermine their cause.
"We're from Ireland.We don't like nationalism -- it kills people!",
Geldof said after reminding the crowd that Ireland is also a divided island, cyprusscene website reported on Sunday.
On the other hand Brentwood, you are wearing wallto-wall f*** Primark."
Geldof even tore into Brentwood's decision to vote for Brexit.
Geldof has always had a more intellectual side to his nature and he's had an opportunity to exercise it thanks to this two-part documentary, which he co-wrote with historian Roy Foster.
Geldof said: "It's a song, it's a
Geldof said: "It's a song, it's a track but it's an event, and the track but it's an event, and the next stage is to turn it into a phenomenon like it was in the 80s."
Coroner Roger Hatch said 25-year-old
Geldof took a fatal dose of high-purity heroin shortly before she was found dead at her home south of London on April 7.
Returning his verdict, North West Kent Coroner Roger Hatch said Ms
Geldof's death had been "drugs-related" and heroin had played a part.
19, 2011, file photo, Peaches
Geldof arrives for the Moet & Chandon Etoile Award, at a central London venue.
Geldof told presenter Lorraine Kelly said it was "still very raw" as he explained: "I'm walking down the road and suddenly out of the blue there's an awareness of her - and you know, I buckle.
In an interview published this week in The Spectator magazine, Ms
Geldof spoke of the pressures of fame and said she felt people thought she would die in the same way as her TV presenter mother, who died from an accidental heroin overdose at her London home aged 41 in 2000.