Myles Dungan is an Irish broadcaster and author. He has presented many arts programmes on RTÃÂ Radio, and has also been a sports broadcaster on RTÃÂ Television. Since October 2010 he has been the presenter of "The History Show" on RTÃÂ Radio One.
Dungan was educated at St Patrick's College, Cavan. He began broadcasting in RTÃÂ in 1977 as a continuity announcer. He has worked as a reporter for RTÃÂ Television and RTÃÂ Radio. He has presented programmes such as Five Seven Live, The Arts Show and Rattlebag on RTÃÂ Radio 1. He was a regular stand-in presenter on Today with Pat Kenny on RTÃÂ Radio 1, when Pat Kenny was absent or on holiday. In 1988, he won a Jacob's Award for his radio series, Vietnam.
Dungan also became known to Irish television audiences during the 1980s and 1990s as the regular presenter of RTÃÂ's televised golf coverage, and as host of an NFL American football highlights show.
In May 2006, Dungan received a Fulbright Scholar Award for academic study in the United States. He undertook a research project at the University of California in Berkeley, California on Irish-Native American history.
In 2008, he was key-figure in RTÃÂ's coverage of the 1918 Ireland and The Great War, remembering 90 years since the end of World War I.
Dungan has also written many books, mainly biographies and history. He attends and participates at a number of Summer Schools relating to Irish History, and delivers a course in history at City Colleges in Dublin.
Raised in Kells in the north of County Meath, he attended secondary school at St. Patrick's College in Cavan Town. Raised as a Catholic, he is a convert to the Church of Ireland.
In May 2011, he fronted RTÃÂ radio coverage of Queen Elizabeth II's visit to Ireland.
He is the maternal uncle of fellow RTÃÂ radio broadcaster Philip Boucher-Hayes.