Imagine waking up after a work night out with a fuzzy head, an impending hangover, and the vague memory of kissing one of your colleagues. Now imagine that not only was your whole night filmed by several cameras, but that the footage will soon be broadcast to the entire world.
Imagine waking up after a work night out with a fuzzy head, an impending hangover, and the vague memory of kissing one of your colleagues. Now imagine that not only was your whole night filmed by several cameras, but that the footage will soon be broadcast to the entire world.
Her grandfather Eddie Kelliher was once an Olympic sailor for Ireland and now Daisy Kelliher (33) is set to make a big splash in her own right as the newest crew member on Bravo’s hit reality series Below Deck.
The native of Dublin’s Glenageary nabbed a coveted role as Chief Stew on board a 54-metre superyacht worth €20m as it sailed around the Adriatic sea in Croatia.
She told the
Irish Independent how boredom during lockdown prompted her to throw her hat in the ring and audition for the European instalment of the show, which airs on Netflix.
The popular franchise first aired in 2013 and has been dubbed ‘Downton Abbey on water’, thanks to the level of drama that takes place on the high seas.
Below Deck is back for another series of madness and this time Irish viewers will be doubly delighted as there’s one of our own onboard.
Daisy Kelliher (33) is the Chief Stewardess in Bravo’s new series of the show which will begin to air on 1 March.
Bravo stated that she’s ‘considered a yachting legacy’ as ‘her grandfather was an Olympic sailor for Ireland in 1964, and her parents – and many aunts and uncles – were yachties.’
Eddie Kelliher is the Olympian they’re referring to and he competed for the country in Tokyo.
Daisy Kelliher Pic: Facebook copy
Daisy’s bio continues, ‘Though Daisy has a lot to live up to when she joins Parsifal III as the new Chief Stew, that doesn’t stop her from diving head-first into crew politics and drinking like a true Irish woman.’ We’ll ignore that tired stereotype, it continues…