Australia is back in the Eurovision song contest.
Newstalk Breakfast presenter Chris Donoghue is disgusted at the news, but Ivan Yates thinks it is just practical.
After recovering from that news, the pair turned their attention to the front pages of the papers.
They noted this morning's big and late breaking stories about the terror raid in Paris and the death of New Zealand rugby legend Jonah Lomu did not make this morning's papers.
Storm Barney and photographs of the first gay couple to get married instead made the covers.
The Irish Independent and The Irish Times leads relates to the Stormont deal between Sinn Féin and the DUP.
"Fight for jobs as North to slash corporation tax" - the news that from 2018 there will be the same CPT of 12.5%.
"Stormont deal hailed as key turning point. Deadlock over welfare reform and paramilitarism broken in new accord."
"French authorities now seek ninth suspect".
"Minister gave legal profession veto on reforms".
The Irish Examiner has: "State cannot combat terrorist threat" - claims that Defence Forces are not properly resourced to meet terror threats.
And Universal Health Insurance could have broken laws and cost families as it is ditched and dumped.
On the tabloids:
The Herald: "Our hero - heroic teenager was stabbed as he tried to stop a thug stealing a woman's handbag".
The Irish Daily Star: "Football bomb plot chaos. Germany versus Holland match abandoned last night".
The Irish Daily Mirror: "Charlie's $10 million in HIV blackmail hell" and The Sun has the same story about Charlie Sheen.
Extracts of an interview Jonah Lomu did with the BBC have reemerged this morning, after his death overnight. In it, he talked about how rugby gave him an opportunity to escape gang culture.
The credit unions are, according to the Independent, expecting a surge of loan applications ahead of the Euro Championships.
Also in the papers, disaster as Irish kitman Dick Redmond dressed up as Superman for Monday's nights match, but he lost his cape during celebrations at Copper Face Jack's.
Finally, Ireland is the most expensive place in Europe to die. The Oireachtas heard yesterday that between €3,000 and €5,000 is the cost of burying a loved one here.
You can listen to the Newspaper Review here: